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Sunday Gratitude – 5.IV.2026

To those celebrating today – Christ is Risen! – Happy Easter!
And then there are the “weird” ones here who are still waiting another week, among which I count myself. There have been a lot of services already – yesterday, I think I was in church for nearly four hours. I’ve really struggled this Lent; from the beginning, I felt less ready for it than most years and this year… wow. For the greater part of Lent, I believed that the Orthodox were also going to be celebrating Pascha today, and it was only looking at the calendar more carefully a couple of weeks ago when I realized that no, there’s a one-week difference. I don’t know. I wasn’t expecting to spend so much time in church this weekend, but I was at vigil last night, and I certainly had the feeling of moving from the darkness into the light, and by the time the service was over, there was an air of hopefulness and joy there. For that I am grateful. (My brain did fight against this on the way home, though. *sigh*)
I am grateful for the more spring-like weather, and the opportunity to be outside. I’m also grateful for my neighbor who invites me to come walking with her.
I am grateful for friends who take the time to talk even in the rain.
I am grateful for making it home in a storm the other day; I wasn’t expecting it, then all of a sudden, I was driving down this country highway with lightning flashes all around. I don’t think that they were very close, as there was only a tiny bit of thunder, but what a show! The next day, driving down those same roads, I could actually see how high the water is, and I’m grateful that there were no issues with low-lying stretches of road or the bridges.

Time to take the Christmas wreath down! I am thankful to have had a little bit of time to be outside with my kids, and I’m thankful that they have places around that they can enjoy riding their bikes through, and that they’ve been fine with this “exploring”.
I am thankful for the joy of singing.
I am thankful for the things that are showing signs of life (and even blooming) even after a very cold winter and long periods of neglect.
I am grateful for the opportunity to have been in contact with a number of people on this day, in the joy of Easter.
I am grateful for yet another sign that I’m not alone through the hard stuff.
Thank you so much for being here! Christ is Risen!

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Sunday Gratitude – 29.III.2026

I really hate it when it seems like I blink and yet another week has passed. Somehow so much of this time ends up feeling like a blur, and it seems like all that is left is a growing list of things that should have been done long ago, but haven’t been done yet.
In the meantime, though, I’ve been trying not to lose a sense of gratitude, and to also try to make the most of the days at hand. We’ve had a couple of days that have hit 70F, which has been amazing, and especially as the days are getting longer, it would be terrible if we didn’t do something to take advantage of the warmer weather. My younger son had a day off of school a couple of weeks back, and the two of us went out on our bikes and rode ten miles together, and it was amazing. He also started taking pictures with my camera that afternoon, so I’ll be sharing a few of those in this post.

A couple of weeks after the real birthday, my youngest, in kindergarten, had her first real birthday party. It was a bowling alley affair, and, per the terms of the contract, was less than two hours long, but for a group of 5 and 6 year olds, it was fine. I was completely stressed out over this for at least a week for a number of reasons, but it turned out really, really good. Even the weather held out, kind of… It started raining about the time that the party started, and it was still raining as people left. Had we started a couple of hours later, everybody would have been going home in sleet, because we had a blizzard come through the next day. The kids were thrilled to get the day off of school, and despite the crazy wind, we never lost power. The next day, our dear neighbor made a path for our car using a snowblower.
I’m grateful that even though I managed to break a spoke on the one bike (a different one than before), this happened in a place where I could ride to a place where I could leave the bike for a couple of days, and which was very close to the bike shop. On the night that this happened, I was also able to get a ride back home with one of the ladies from church. I’d never talked to her before, and she’s incredibly sweet, and lives just a couple of streets over from where I live.
I’m grateful for the amazing time I had at St. Haralambos in Niles a couple of weeks back. Not only were some very dear “real life” friends there, I finally got to meet Fr. Andrew Damick in person. We have been online acquaintances (friends) for over 20 years, and it seemed like high time to meet him in person. He actually recognized me by sight as well, which is crazy because it’s been a looong time since I posted any photos of myself that he might come across. 🙂 That was a lot of fun, though.

Breezy days and kites! I am grateful, as well, for the opportunity to visit an old friend and just enjoy sitting on the front step, having a conversation in the sunshine.
In many ways, I feel pulled very, very, very thin. There have been a lot of good things, to be sure, but there have been a number of very, very frustrating things as well. I don’t know; at this point, I’m not sure that I’ll ever have things “figured out”, but there’s a path to go forward on, and that’s the way through this all. Forgive me again for the blog silence – I truly am grateful for you.

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Wordle #530


Never played Wordle? Check out my Wordle strategy page!
Wordle explanations are posted a day late to ensure that no one accidentally sees the solution before playing.
Line 1: Not much to go on with “study”, just a “T” in the wrong place.
Line 2: “T” still in the wrong place, but now we’ve added an “E” in the wrong place as well.
Line 3: “E” and “T” are now in the right places, but it’s still kind of a stumper – I’m not getting anything really good in the way of consonants.
Line 4: Hmm.. There really aren’t a lot of good choices for making blends left, all of the other vowels don’t show up in the word, and I highly doubt that the word starts with “Y” at this point. I’m going to guess that the word is “E”-consonant-“E”-consonant-“T”. And there does seem to be a strong contender considering this scenario.
Line 5: “Eject”! Nifty! 🙂
Did you get this Wordle? Tell me about it in the comments!
Happy Gaming!

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Songs of the Season – Roger Miller – “Old Toy Trains”

The local radio station is well into the six weeks or so of nonstop Christmas music. This year seems better than most, I’ve noticed that they haven’t completely avoided the religious songs until two days before Christmas, and they’ve changed the mix a bit – it was sweet, for example, to hear the version of “We Wish You a Merry Christmas” sung by the Muppets and John Denver.
I’m not one of these people who gets into the Christmas music a lot, but I figured this year I might try sharing some lesser-known songs, both secular and sacred, as part of “Christmas Cheer”. Once I get a few, I may start a playlist or two on YouTube, and I’ll let you know when I do.
I don’t know a lot of Roger Miller music, but I love what I know. I remember seeing Disney’s Robin Hood on SelectaVision Disc as a kid, where Roger Miller voiced the Rooster and wrote some of the songs. I knew a few of his other songs (I thought “England Swings” was awesome). Man, does he have a distinctive voice!
In any case, I found this last year, and it’s just sweet.
Anyone have any “lesser known” Christmas songs or carols to share?

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The Muppet Christmas Carol – ‘Tis the Season Cinema

I have a confession to make. The biggest reason that I decided to tag along with Lisa at Boondock Ramblings and Erin at Cracker Crumb Life with their Christmas movie watching (‘Tis the Season Cinema) was because this movie was on the list. Not only is it my favorite Christmas movie of all-time, it’s probably in the top five of my favorite movies ever. That being said, I’ve been having a lot of fun with this anyway!

Movie still/promo shot – (not my work) It all started in the Christmas season of 1993. I was a young teenager, but old enough that my mom let me walk around Wal-Mart myself. As I was wont to do, I usually ended up in the electronics section. In the days before all the super-sized Wal-Marts, this section usually tended to be near the center of the store, and had its own “choke point” entrance. Almost inevitably, smack dab in the center of the intersection of the aisle running along the entrance to the section and the aisle leading out of the choke point, there would be a television display, and usually there would be some sort of family friendly movie that had recently come out running off of a hidden VCR to multiple televisions on the display. Wal-Mart wasn’t just trying to sell the televisions, but also get people to buy whatever the newest VHS release was. After all, this was just before DVDs were out, and at a time where pretty much everyone I knew had a sizable VHS collection, but for families with kids, it seemed almost more so. Included seemed to always be a good number of Disney tapes in their familiar, oversized containers.
On this fateful day, the movie playing happened to be “A Muppet Christmas Carol”.
I think I walked up just as the song “Bless Us All” was playing, and by the end of the song, I wanted to get the movie. After all, who can resist tiny, singing frogs. I asked my mom if we could get it, and although neither of us had even known that “A Muppet Christmas Carol” existed before that day, she bought it for me, and I have been in love with it ever since.
Seriously, why doesn’t this song get played in the month and a half of Christmas music on the radio? Maybe it needs to get inserted in a couple of more films, like “White Christmas”! 😉 I liked the novel “A Christmas Carol”, which I know we read in school when I was in 7th or 8th grade, but it may have been the second reading of it for me. Charles Dickens wrote a lot, but this may be his most influential – after all, 175 years after Dickens wrote this book, the term “Scrooge” has become part of the English language. (Dickens had a thing with names, and John Granger picks up on this in praise of J.K. Rowling in the Harry Potter series. Names and their sounds are important to characters, and when C.S. Lewis started The Voyage of the Dawn Treader with ‘There was once a boy named Eustace Clarence Scrubb, and he almost deserved it,’ native English speakers are instinctually repulsed a little by it, just like they would have been with a name like “Ebenezer Scrooge”.) T
Things I love about this movie:
- This is amazingly faithful to the book considering that it’s a children’s movie. As a kid, the popular “children’s” version of A Christmas Carol was Mickey’s Christmas Carol, which I remember as being awful.
- I love the way how they keep a lot of Dickens’ prose intact, but they say it in such a way that it may sound a little old-fashioned, but not crazy weird. It reminds me of the HBO miniseries “Chernobyl” and how they got all the characters comfortable with the Russian names so that when they were talking about “Comrade Nemobezskovskaya” (made up name) it just rolled off the tongue.
- The costumes are fantastic. I don’t know if they strictly stick to a period, but the styles of clothes and hair seem to all go together, at least, and with the flashbacks, it actually seems like they changed the period of this as well.
- It’s funny. You can argue with Gonzo as Charles Dickens, but it’s the first of the humor and absurdity in the movie, and I think this is a failing of most retellings of A Christmas Carol in general – they just take themselves too seriously. The semi-opaque “fourth wall” is done in a really amusing way as well. There’s plenty of inserted humor, which I think works, mostly as it is between Gonzo and Rizzo the Rat, but because the characters are talking to each other
- The music is fantastic. Besides just being good, I enjoy a lot of the little details, like using all the brass to give the film a little bit of a “regal” feel.
- The continuity between the human and Muppet actors is great.
- Contrary to a lot of the retellings of this story, it’s cheerful. The sets are bright and interesting. There’s not a whitewashing that some people were living in terrible conditions at this point in history, but there’s a sense of joy throughout the entire movie, and in the end, with Scrooge’s redemption, he’s now able to join in and be part of that. I would have to say that the 1999 version of A Christmas Carol (starring Patrick Stewart) is probably the version that I’ve seen that is a) most faithful to the book and b) faithful to all sorts of little details of time and place. It’s a very good version, but it’s depressing in all the dreariness. I mean, when they talk about Tiny Tim not dying as a child, that should be a cause for rejoicing, rather than leaving somebody wondering who would actually want to live in that time and place.
- Balance and range in the personalities of the characters. Michael Caine manages to pull off the “bad” Scrooge and the redeemed Scrooge; Kermit as Bob Crachit pulls off quiet and meek without being a pushover, etc.
- They did not excise the Christian parts of it. Very similarly to the spirit of the book, it’s very much a Christian story, but it’s not pushy or contrived and doesn’t proselytize.
- I could probably spend all night with this list. 🙂
I originally bought the DVD when I was living in Germany. I had purchased a laptop with a DVD player in late 2002, and this was one of the first movies I bought. I was so appalled with what they did with this DVD release that I actually contacted Disney Germany to complain. (I actually got a response back, basically telling me to take it up with Disney in the US!)

First of all, with that first release, they didn’t offer it in widescreen at all, even though it had been filmed in widescreen, and there had been a home release of the entire movie in widescreen on Laserdisc. The DVD was inferior to this release on that count, but even more disturbing than that, they cut the song “When Love is Gone” as sung by Meredith Braun, who played Belle.
What I didn’t understand was that the VHS and Laserdisc versions of The Muppet Christmas Carol was technically the “extended version”. At the scene where Belle releases Ebenezer from their engagement, Belle breaks into song. The song, “When Love is Gone”, not only is powerful, but structurally serves as the end of ‘Act I’ in a musical.
Now, this was the first movie that Brian Henson, son of Jim Henson, directed. This was before the Muppets were purchased by Disney, and I believe this was their first collaboration. Jeffrey Katzenberg was in charge of Disney, and, if I remember correctly, he absolutely hated the song “When Love is Gone”, and believed, in general, that kids’ movies shouldn’t have slow ballads in them. Apparently, he also wanted to cut “Part of Your World” from The Little Mermaid, but it stayed. When the focus group results came back and showed that kids didn’t really like the emotionally difficult scene, Katzenberg had “proof” that it didn’t belong.
Henson has claimed that he wasn’t forced to cut it, but he and Paul Williams, who wrote the score for the movie, were big fans of the number, which is probably why it ended up in those 90s home releases. His opinion was that it’s not necessarily bad for kids to be a little uncomfortable. I side with Henson on this one.
One would think, then, that it would stay for the DVD releases, but it didn’t. Over the years, review after review on Amazon and other places had people complain about the song being cut. I am sure more people saw “A Muppet Christmas Carol” on VHS than in the movie theater, so for people who remember the movie from the 90s, that song was just part of the movie, and makes the movie complete.
Again, a variation of the song is used as the ending reprise, and they had a version sung by Martina McBride to play over the end credits and for radio release.
There was some sort of deluxe edition DVD (which I bought for a dear friend) that came out circa 2005 that had the song with the full-screen version, but not the widescreen edition. I bought a widescreen edition a few years later where the same thing was true, and it seemed completely bizarre. It seems as though while Henson and tons of fans were getting their point across, the original film was lost somewhere in Disney’s archive. Henson says that for a long time, he’d call and ask if anyone had found it, and the answer was always “no”. Apparently, he even put some money into hiring people to look, or he was going to, but that went nowhere as well. Disney didn’t think that it would be lost forever, but Henson seemed doubtful, and without that film, transferring it to a widescreen digital edition with that song would be almost impossible.
In late 2020, Brian Henson informed fans that the original film had been found, and that this meant that there was a possibility, again, to do a “restored” widescreen edition. Disney+ will be broadcasting this edition starting December 11.
I have soured a lot on Disney since the 1990s, and even the restored version is not enough to get me to subscribe. If it comes out as a DVD or Blu-Ray version, I probably will buy it, though. Before I found out about the new release (last week) I finally found a decently-priced Laserdisc copy on Ebay. I have never had a Laserdisc player, but … I love this movie. I think it’s the only movie I’ve purchased multiple times for myself, and I even have two different editions of the soundtrack. (I thought I had lost the first one, but it turned up after a couple of years – doubled up in the case of a different CD, if I recall correctly, after I had purchased the soundtrack re-release.)
I was afraid, last night, that the only version I could find was the “bad” release from 2003 or so. Luckily, I found the widescreen disc from the second time I got the DVD with a couple of other discs that were sitting on the shelf without cases (thanks kids!) What I ended up doing was watching the movie on the TV with the DVD player until the scene with Belle, pausing the movie, watching the song (in widescreen) on Youtube on my laptop, and then going back to the DVD on the TV once it was done. It was kind of awkward, but it worked after a fashion.
Yesterday ended up being quite a crazy day – I knew it was going to be busy, but it seemed like with everything, there was some sort of snag or complication, so although I started on this pretty early, by 11pm the top priority was getting kids in bed since it was WAY past when they should have been asleep. I haven’t read the other reviews, but if you’re interested to read, Lisa’s review is here: https://lisahoweler.com/2022/12/01/tis-the-season-cinema-the-muppets-christmas-carol/ and Erin’s is here: https://crackercrumblife.com/2022/12/01/tis-the-season-cinema-the-muppets-christmas-carol/. I think I saw mentioned earlier that this is one of Erin’s favorite movies as well, so I can’t wait to read what she has to write!

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artistic disputes, Bless us All, Brian Henson, childrens movies, Christmas movies, DVD, Ebenezer Scrooge, focus groups, humor, Jeffrey Katzenberg, joy, Laserdisc, Meredith Braun, Michael Caine, movies, musical theater, musicals, names, old movies, Patrick Stewart, Paul Williams, Scrooge, tis the season cinema, VHS, When Love is Gone -
Wordle #529


Never played Wordle? Check out my Wordle strategy page!
Wordle explanations are posted a day late to ensure that no one accidentally sees the solution before playing.
Line 1: “Undue” didn’t do too badly here – one “U” actually! (Two would have been crazy.)
Line 2: Moved the “U” and the “D”, still not in the right places, but “Y” unexpectedly came up exactly in the right place.
Line 3: I was having trouble thinking of anything to play, and when that happens, I sometimes “lose” letters, like the “U” here, but at the very least, from this I know the word has to end “UDY”.
Line 4: Again, it took a little bit, but once I saw it, there was no doubt that the answer was “study”.
Did you get this Wordle? Tell me about it in the comments!
Happy Gaming!

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Wordle #528


Never played Wordle? Check out my Wordle strategy page!
Wordle explanations are posted a day late to ensure that no one accidentally sees the solution before playing.
Line 1: “Tepid” got me a “D” and an “E” but in the wrong places. Not to shabby though.
Line 2: Shuffle around, got the “E” in the right place, narrowing down where the “D” should be placed.
Line 3: Hmm.. The “D” doesn’t begin the word either. And I got an “N” in the wrong place.
Line 4: If the “D” would go in the middle, then it could be a word that ends “DUE”. And “undue” would use that “N” as well. Sweet!
Did you get this Wordle? Tell me about it in the comments!
Happy Gaming!

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Wordless Wednesday #9 – Farewell to a Faithful Firefly Friend



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A Woman’s Voice on Orthodox Christianity Online

Wouldn’t you know, but on the day after I posted some of my impressions from 21 years of blogging, I found in my morning tech roundup here that Ian Bogost at The Atlantic published a piece called The Age of Social Media Is Ending which was quite interesting. He remembers a lot of the old stuff I do, like the site Six Degrees (which I enjoyed), but while I think there were some parallels with what we both wrote, I think we’re of vastly different opinions on where things are going. The more I think about it, the more I think I want to put my thoughts into a separate post…
One of the reasons that I started this blog – besides that I like to think and write – was actually a post in the Orthodox Christianity community on Reddit. The author states that she’s a young woman in her 20s, and although she enjoys some of the online resources on Orthodoxy, she feels like there are hardly any women online and very little that is aimed at women at her stage of life. (Original post) Going down through the comments, somebody made a remark about even with the Orthodox women bloggers out there, a large percentage are “homemaking” blogs centered around house and kids, very often homeschooling.
As I mentioned on my last post about blogging, when I started, it didn’t seem like there was a great disparity in the number of men and the number of women blogging. However, a lot of that comes with the fact that most of us, at that time, were just blogging about our everyday lives, and were generally at a similar stage in life – finishing off college or newly into the workforce. This is the stage where the reddit poster is. What I started to notice was that once the women I knew got married, but even moreso once they had kids, they just didn’t post very much anymore. Men, on the other hand, probably didn’t post as frequently as the women did to start out with, but seemed to be better at continuing on blogging even once they were married and had kids.

The blogger, in pre-kid days Before I got to the point of having kids myself, I really didn’t understand what was happening; once my first daughter was born, my days were no longer about me whatsoever. Even with a spouse, one is dealing with another adult. With a newborn, than an infant, then a toddler, there is no understanding that mom doesn’t have infinite energy. Hence, mere blogging gets put to the side.
The other thing that tends to happen is that mom’s day is filled with kid issues. Figuring out what to feed everybody. Making sure kids aren’t doing things that could hurt or kill them. Shuttling them around – especially as they get older. It’s pretty boring stuff to the outside world. It’s not that once a woman has kids, she can no longer think, but there is a phase in life where the primary focus is keeping things together at home, and I think this is true even for most women who work outside the home – it’s not as though most of us can hire nannies and housekeepers!
The thing is, for most women, when measured along the timeline of one’s life, the phase of being independent and on one’s own (“alone”, if you will) is quite short. It’s very hard to be a “voice” for these women when, by the time one can really get perspective on it, it’s already over. At the same time, it’s a very formative period, and probably one of the times in a person’s life when one is most open to change. It’s a two-edged sword, though. On one hand, it’s a time when some people develop an interest in Orthodoxy, and on the other, it’s also a period where there is quite a lot of falling away from the Orthodox Church.
It’s often not easy to be a woman in the Orthodox Church. I don’t mean to imply by that statement that I’m wanting to change the Church, but that for anyone truly trying to live a Christian life these days, the path isn’t easy, and while there are things that make it difficult to be a man in the Orthodox Church, there are certainly different issues that affect women differently.
Furthermore, women and men consider the world differently. I think, in general, men like to come into things in a very “rational” way. It’s not that they don’t feel things or have intuition about things, but they would like data to back up what they are processing. I think in that way, Orthodoxy is very appealing to men because there is this rich treasury of theology and lives of the saints and this sort of thing to delve into. For women, I believe that a lot of what they consider is relationships – how they and their family fit into the world. It’s not that they are uninterested in things like theology, but they also want to feel the assurance of a loving God rather than a referee keeping score.
The truth is, there’s a place for both in the Orthodox Church, and it is absolutely necessary. Orthodoxy is a lived faith, not just a collection of a bunch of rules amassed over the years. I find it very interesting when people ask questions like “Are Orthodox Christians allowed to use public pools“, which, on it’s surface, comes off as being an absurd question. However, a lot of people’s experience of religion is through “the rules”, and even in Jesus’ time, he called out the Pharisees – who were experts in the law – to stop using the law as a religion in itself. I think women, generally being tasked with taking care of children and such, use the baseline of “God is Love” to try to bring people back into relationships with each other. They see a lot more “grey area” in interpersonal relationships, and also have to react without consulting what “the rules” say.
Each approach has its benefits and its drawbacks, but when put together, they work well. However, at the end of the day, reason must still reign supreme. The discourse of 4 Maccabees is a wonderful example of a woman who relies on reason even in the face of unbelievable mental anguish, so it’s not like the people of the Bible were even saying that women aren’t capable of using reason; it’s just that in each of us, we have to constantly be working to order our thoughts and desires to be in line with God.
I came across this post from Fr. Andrew Damick which I think is important and I think also touches on what I’m writing on here. He doesn’t mention young women specifically, but he speaks about how Orthodox outreach in the United States in particular is geared toward fairly narrow swaths of people, and that there are many gaps where very few people are speaking. Part of the issue is, of course, the Orthodox are very disorganized. Yes, there is the jurisdictional messiness, but in general, Greeks and Slavs are not really known for doing things in efficient and methodical ways. I say this being an Orthodox Christian for two decades and loving them all, but apart from the Russian missionaries to Alaska, it’s not like most of them came with any sort of plan for evangelization. Even many of the early missionary priests were primarily concerned in ministering to the scattered sheep – St. John Kochuroff, Fr. Nicola Yanney for example – and while that was absolutely proper and right, there are still jurisdictions in the US that barely have any convert population to speak of.
However, when it comes down to it, it isn’t inherently the priests or the bishops or theology that gets people interested and keeps them in Orthodoxy. A lot of that comes down to relationships. The most important, of course, is that between one’s self in God. However, a large percentage of how people feel about the church does come down to how people feel in relation to others there – is there, at the very least, a comfort level.
I benefitted greatly from being part of the Orthodox “online community” in coming to Orthodoxy and understanding what was going on. I was baptized in a parish in a non-English speaking, Western European country, and most of the time, I lived at least an hour away. Apart from people from a couple of the churches, I didn’t know anyone else Orthodox in the entire country, so it was amazing to have people I could communicate with in my own language.

St. Nicholas Chapel, ROCOR Cathedral, Munich, Germany This isn’t to say that there is a lot lacking – or even dangerous – about online Orthodoxy, and I think a lot of this, at the moment, comes from the fact that a lot of the loudest voices are from those with lots of time, little life experience, and a penchant for following the “Orthodoxy of Rules”. That’s not what the church is about, and that isn’t all that people ought to be able to find.
I’m not holding myself up to be a great writer or thinker, or have any delusions that this little blog is anything but a voice among many. However, it is one thing that I have learned in my many years is that it’s not necessarily the smartest who succeed, but rather those who may have a decent amount of talent (a calling, if you will) and persevere in doing something despite the hardships, obstacles, and the inevitable failures.
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Wordle #527


Never played Wordle? Check out my Wordle strategy page!
Wordle explanations are posted a day late to ensure that no one accidentally sees the solution before playing.
Line 1: “Happy” got me letter – a “P” smack dab in the middle of the word.
Line 2: “Tepid” was the first word that came to mind with a “P” in the middle that didn’t have another “P” in it somewhere. Not that there aren’t a few more out there, but it is kind of unusual.
Did you get this Wordle? Tell me about it in the comments!
Happy Gaming!

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Wordle #526


Never played Wordle? Check out my Wordle strategy page!
Wordle explanations are posted a day late to ensure that no one accidentally sees the solution before playing.
Line 1: So.. We’re going from “clean” to a misplaced “A”. Hmm…
Line 2: And… The “A” isn’t in them middle either.
Line 3: Finally got the spot for the “A”, and a bonus “Y” at the end as well. Something here makes me want to put a double letter between the “A” and “Y”, even though it’s not the “best use” of the letters.
Line 4: “HAPPY” – Yay! 🙂
Did you get this Wordle? Tell me about it in the comments!
Happy Gaming!

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Sunday Gratitude – #9

It was a very busy week with Thanksgiving and all.
Over at Bookworm Room, Andrea’s annual Thanksgiving post. Coincidentally enough, she posted a song from the movie “White Christmas” called “Count Your Blessings”, which was this week’s ‘Tis The Season Cinema pick. The comments over there are usually quite good; one of them mentions a Hawaiian saying – “A monster cannot survive in an atmosphere of gratitude”.
I am grateful that I got some time to rest this week.
I am grateful for the friends and people who help keep me going.
I am grateful that I am in God’s hands, and being “looked after” by a saint.

On this day nine years ago. Lake Michigan in Milwaukee

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