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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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Live Not By Lies Documentary & the Rod Dreher Book Stack

As a kid growing up in Chicago, communism was a boogeyman far away as well as a reality that far too many people in the city had suffered under. Back in the ’80s, there certainly was a feeling that the USSR was a rival, but perhaps one that was slowly ossifying. President Reagan certainly made anti-communism a priority, and the church people I was around certainly were disturbed by the religious persecution going on in Communist countries, but to a kid like me, it seemed like communism was an ideology whose heyday had passed and could never strike in the United States.
The flip side to this was the stories of people who were just around. Chicago has a huge population of Eastern Europeans; many claim that Chicago has more Poles than any city besides Warsaw (this claim has always been somewhat dubious), but besides that, there certainly were others. There was a girl I went to school with who was born in Ukraine in the 1940s, fled when he was three, then spent a couple of years in Germany before making it to the United States. When we were in elementary school, probably about 1990, her dad got the chance to visit family in Ukraine – if I remember correctly, it might have been the second opportunity he’d gotten since leaving forty years prior. He was really excited, I think, because he’d be able to bring a Bible with him this time, and he showed us the pages of this Bible in a language with strange characters.
So many of these people were doing the best that they could to be “good” Americans, and were incredibly thankful to be in the United States. That being said, there was a certain sadness to be perceived, a love and longing for home, but knowing that to live under communism was often a fate worse than death. As I got older and heard more of these stories, both from people who had left and people who didn’t, more and more of a picture of what communism does to people and to society filled out in my head.
One of the things that is absolutely not tolerated under communism is free speech. This is also true under fascism. If the state is the highest good and final arbiter of what is good and evil, of course it follows that to speak up against this is treason, and traitors are dealt with incredibly harshly, as this is no longer a matter of a difference of philosophy, but a heresy to the religion of the state. I certainly became interested in this phenomenon, really becoming interested in Cold War Studies, but also getting very interested in the motivations of people who dared to stand up against this, such as the White Rose group in Nazi Germany. As much as many of the people around me hardly considered the Orthodox to be Christians under normal circumstances, when it came to talking about the horrendous persecutions of Christians in the Soviet Union and in Eastern Europe, they could be acknowledged then.
But the thing is, the type of philosophy that led to communism in many places didn’t just appear – its roots go much further back, and much of it is based in “logical” beliefs. All it takes is reading Dostoyevsky to understand that he – in the 19th century – is writing about these same types of thought patterns that come into vogue becoming dangerous and weaponized.

Far from being alarmist, it’s certainly fair to be worried that many of these patterns are becoming more and more dominant in places like the United States today, and the people who are most sensitive to that and recognize it first are generally those who suffered because of it in another place. This is the premise of Rod Dreher’s book, “Live Not By Lies”, which was originally published in 2020 (impeccable timing there!). In any case, Angel Studios chose to take a chance on doing a documentary based on the book featuring Dreher. They gauged interest, crowdfunded, worked for quite some time on the film’s production, and today, the first of four episodes premiered on the Angel Studios website (https://www.angel.com/watch/live-not-by-lies). I was planning on seeing it tonight, but things kind of got crazy, but I hope to be able to watch it in the next day or so. So far, I have heard nothing but excellent things about it, so I encourage everyone to check it out!
The next thing I want to mention is, perhaps, a silly thing, but it may be of interest to some. Back when I had my full website about the White Rose, I had a list of books that I had noted that they had read, knowing that reading really influenced the way they thought and what they believed as well as what they believed in. All of them read voraciously! Hans and Sophie Scholl often read books in French to get around the Nazi publishing bans – Hans’ French was so good, he’d been offered a book translation job at one point, and while Sophie’s French wasn’t anywhere near that level, her French was decent enough to be able to read fairly difficult books in the language. There’s a lot that could be said on that subject, and it might make for a good post someday. *L* However, because they all had this sort of relationship with books, I started putting together a list of books that got mentioned that they had read, and I posted it because, even as it was incomplete, it was a phenomenal collection.

Rod Dreher and Vesper Stamper at the Touchstone Conference, 2024 One of the things I really enjoy about Rod Dreher’s Substack is that there is such good conversation that comes about between people who have read a lot and who have considered a lot due to books. Dreher himself talks a lot about books he’s read, but the comments are full of discussions of books and recommendations, both personal and general. So… What did I do? I created a page, named it “The Rod Dreher Book Stack”, and posted it up over here: https://breathofhallelujah.com/books/the-rod-dreher-book-stack/ . Mind you, Rod Dreher has nothing to do with this in any way, shape, or form, but I think it may be helpful for people like me who hear many of these titles, especially in the comments, but then might want to come back to looking at a particular title later. I’m not promising anything here, that it’s going to be complete or anything (and for the most part, I probably won’t be looking back for things), but we’ll see how this goes, I guess. At this point, I’m still fiddling with some finicky formatting issues, but come on over if you want to take a look.

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Angel Studios, Books, Cold War, communism, courage, dissidents, documentary, Eastern Europe, fascism, film, French language, Hans Scholl, Live Not By Lies, memory, mind control, moral courage, persecution, philosophy, Poland, Rod Dreher, Sophie Scholl, state control, totalitarianism, Ukraine, White Rose -
Lilla Rose Update – April 2025

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The author of this blog is a “Flexi Rep/Affiliate” with Lilla Rose, and is not employed by Lilla Rose. Purchases made through this link <https://www.lillarose.com/katja> will earn the author a commission.
Lilla Rose is always looking for ways to combine beauty with functionality. Over the years, they have come up with various different types of hair items, which, let’s admit, are really, really useful! Well, this April 1st, Lilla Rose is introducing the most functional flexi-clip yet – the Swiss Army flexi!
Dubbed the “Safety First” flexi, it’s the perfect item for cutting one’s self out of large cardboard boxes, cooking in the outback, or defusing the random bomb, all while simultaneously keeping an elegant look. Who wants to be unprepared in these days? Order yours today. And I mean TODAY! 🤣
Now back to our regular programming!
The “Mane Event” flexi this month is called “Camila“. The classic cameos will always look good, and I absolutely love the dusty rose color!
Not that Camila is the only thing new for this month, either! All three of these designs have a very classic-but-not-stuffy vibe to them, which I like.
And, before we forget, this month’s promotion is a free mini (XXS) flexi with $75 or more in purchases.
I mentioned last month that Lilla Rose is doing Friday promotions now. This is true, but I just can’t keep up. If you are interested in following this or other small promotions they run, check out their facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/lillaroseinc. Oh, yes, and in case you were wondering the “Safety First” flexi is an April Fool’s joke! 🙂
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Sunday Gratitude – 30.III.2025

How quickly this year seems to be going! I was caught up in a big house project until a week and a half ago, and I’m grateful to have gotten it done, regardless of whether the outcome is what I would like or not. We’ll see. It’s frustrating that the project took as long as it did, it’s frustrating what the answer is after completing it so far, and it’s frustrating that I seem to have kicked up enough dust to make me sick for the remainder of last week, but having it done makes the idea of continuing to get things done a little bit less of a fantasy.

If only my family room were as clean as this! *L* I have been concerned about certain things as of late – I can’t get into too much detail, but I’m grateful that a number of “little” things have come up to help put a few extra dollars in my pocket. I understand that I come up with a lot of “great” ideas, but my follow-through isn’t always wonderful, but as situations change, I’m thankful to not be panicking at this moment. (On that same note, if any of you happen to be making purchases on Amazon, please consider clicking through one of my links here, either in the sidebar or at the end of my post, to help “establish” my new associates account.)
I’m thankful that we’ve had some good weather. Today was pretty miserable, but Friday was at least 75℉, which was amazing.
I’m thankful for time with friends, for unplanned conversations, and the joy of seeing people face to face. I’m thankful for the conversations, too, that happen with people who are too far away to just meet up with, and hopeful that this isn’t always the case.
I am also thankful for moments with each kid, but at the moment especially with my older son who seems to be mellowing out in some respects, as well as understanding more adult dynamics. It’s strange when he stands next to me and I realize that he’s now taller than I am – with more growing to go! – and he certainly isn’t near to being all grown up, but it’s been little moments with him that give me hope that maybe I haven’t messed up everything in regard to the kids.
I’m sorry I’ve been so light in the posting. I’m very, very tired. Thank you for putting up with me – I am always grateful for your time and attention.

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(reblog) Help build Lily’s Legacy Memorial Chapel


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Living in Wonder – Book Impressions

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases through affiliate links to Amazon.com.
Maybe the third time is the charm with this post, as I’ve started twice over the last couple of months, but never managed to get more than a couple of paragraphs into a review before getting pulled away by one thing or another. (Maybe, just maybe, my motivation for finishing it now is that there’s a different project in desperate need for attention, and I’m having a hard time working on it. No, never, right? *L*)
Honestly, this is a book that is really hard for me to review for a number of reasons. First off, I’ve been a subscriber to Rod Dreher’s Substack for nearly two years now (and please use my referral link if you’d like to as well), and in the space of that time, his readers really got to get an inside look at this book being created, from concept, to difficulties with it, to even voting on a cover design. Secondly, I’ve now met Rod on two occasions, which probably doesn’t make me an unbiased reviewer. Third, there’s a particular aspect of it that hardly feels like something different, probably in large part due to the fact that Rod and I are not just converts to Orthodox Christianity, but people who have now been in the Orthodox Church for a long time; me, 22 years, and he, 18, I think. In the book, he’s not pushing that everyone be an Orthodox Christian, but a there’s a lot that he brings up that draws on Orthodox Christian practice. For someone like me, it’s just become a way of life, right down to the philosophy that as much as there is to this world that is seen, there’s more that is unseen, and most of it is probably beyond what our minds can understand “logically”.

Not quite a relaxing beach, but hey, this is Wisconsin! *L* So let me back up here a bit. There a couple of major themes to “Living in Wonder” – in interviews, Rod has stated that he hates the word “enchantment” to describe what he’s trying to get at (10 minute mark), because people associate it with being shallow, like pixie dust in a Disney movie or something. However, “enchantment” does happen to be the opposite of “disenchantment”, which, he argues, is the way that we in the West have learned to see the world, more or less severing the connection between substance and spirit. It turns out, though that people aren’t designed to live like that, and as a result, lots of people are seeking something else, and finding it, and whether that “enchantment” is striving for God, or allowing one’s self to become enchanted by darker forces – this is really the question of our time.
The book goes into a lot of stories; stories of people who have found themselves in the presence of miracles, and those who have had experiences with what were probably demons. In a lot of cases, we’ll probably never know for sure. However, whereas the Christianity of my childhood would be highly dismissive of a lot of claims on both sides (weeping icons? Impossible!) there’s so much evidence that these “unexplainable” phenomena exist that it’s folly to pretend that they don’t. Furthermore, there are plenty of people who have no qualms about seeking out darker spirits, one ought to be aware of how that can affect a person.
A fair amount of the book does make that connection from the anecdotal to actual studies and research and the like, which ended up getting into modern issues such as dark enchantment through technology, and the ways people today – from kids to very, very powerful adults – are influenced by this.
The book continues on to talk about ways Christians can “re-enchant” their lives, and this is the part, in particular, where Rod draws on his experience of life as an Orthodox Christian for inspiration to do so. Some of it is as “simple” as really being mindful of what our attention is being drawn to – things of God or something lower. Some of it is allowing ourselves to be changed and molded by God and understand that there are some that do this so well that they do “miraculous” things on a regular basis. Near the end of the book, he talks about three men who he regards as “Prophets of the Real” insofar as they are talking to large numbers of people both in person and by means of the internet on different aspects of Christian “re-enchantment”. I’m not sure that I’d pick the same people, but it’s his book, not mine, and he makes the case there. 😉
I liked the book quite a bit, but it was kind of weird to be reading it for the first time, and feel like I’d read it before. No, I hadn’t been anywhere close there, but with being a daily reader of his, there were a lot of things that had been brought up by him that made it very familiar. I enjoy reading Rod a lot in large part because he is a writer whose faith influences his writing quite a bit, but doesn’t do it in a way where one feels like they’re being hit over the head with moralizing or a conversion effort or something. His thesis that “enchantment” is one of the up-and-coming issues of the day certainly is strong, and this book makes a very interesting and readable case for that.
For those of you who want to get a taste of the book, chapter one can be found here: https://www.book2look.com/book/9780310369134 .
I got my signed copy through Eighth Day Books in Wichita – it looks like they still have signed book plates to offer those who order through them still available here: https://www.eighthdaybooks.com/product/165310/Living-in-Wonder-Finding-Mystery-and-Meaning-in-a-Secular-World–With-bookplate-signed-by-Rod-Dreher-while-supplies-last (not an affiliate link)
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Lilla Rose Update – March 2025

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The author of this blog is a “Flexi Rep/Affiliate” with Lilla Rose, and is not employed by Lilla Rose. Purchases made through this link <https://www.lillarose.com/katja> will earn the author a commission.
I’m a bit earlier this month than last, but I was so late last month that I think I ended up with some of March’s new stuff in the mix. However, we’ll work with what we have here. 🙂
The “Mane Event” flexi this month is called “Lilian“. Very much themed to Mardi Gras, but it’s a classic design that isn’t specific to the holiday either.
The obligatory “new releases” 🙂
And a retail promotion that works well with St. Patrick’s Day of a free acrylic U-pin, you pick the shade of green.
It looks like Lilla Rose is going to start doing some Friday offers or promotions or something, and I’ll let you all know when I know. I know these posts aren’t everyone’s cup of tea, but I hope you’ll not mind them too much.
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Orthodox Help – In Search of a Kidney Donor

Besides two birthdays, this week has had a couple of hard deadlines for stuff. I managed to hit the one for today, and I need to get the other done this weekend, so forgive me again for light posting.
I do want to share this with all of you – the priest at Holy Myrrhbearers Orthodox Church in Bonners Ferry, Idaho has put out an appeal looking for a kidney donor for someone there. I know a little bit more about the situation that what is posted here, but I don’t want to say a whole lot because of people’s privacy and all. However, I do feel it’s an important message to share, not only because the person needs prayer, but because if there would be somebody to volunteer, the message needs to get to them in the first place.


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Saturday on Substack – 22.II.2025
This Substack post contains reference to the Beatles, the Lennon Sisters, the Rutles, Oasis, and Yoko Ono. Just to give you fair warning!

In other news, I’ve set up again with Amazon Associates. Some of my very early links have not been fixed, but I think most of them have

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Is the Age of the Snowflake Over? (Caleb Hammer)

I’ve been hearing things over the last couple of months that Gen Z – born after the Millennials, so born between 1997 and 2012, roughly – are much more “conservative” than Millennials. Despite having two children that fall into the tail end of this demographic, I don’t see enough people of these ages to really feel I have any great insight into it. However, I did hear a lot of chatter about the way Gen Z voted in the 2024 Presidential election (such as here: https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/columnist/2024/11/07/trump-win-men-gen-z-voted/76095027007/), chatter about Gen Z being more traditional, and about Gen Z even returning to church. This phenomenon, though, seems to be heavily male, and as this generation starts settling down in earnest, I suppose we’ll see how people end up.
One thing that just strikes me as interesting, though, and maybe a bit of the Zeitgeist, is the Caleb Hammer show. The episodes are on Youtube, and Mr. Hammer, himself just celebrated his 30th birthday, talks to people who are in debt to try to make some sense of their finances and set down a path for the guest to follow to try to make it out of debt. Dave Ramsey he is not. Instead of the unflappable, “grandfatherly” persona Ramsey has built, Hammer is not only excitable and often yells at his guests, he heaps insults at them and is often crass and vulgar. The episode that “dropped” on Valentine’s Day, for example (very, very not safe for work – do not play around children):
(For an episode that is much easier on the ears as far as crudeness and profanity, this one might be a better choice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGBs6WShjds . On the other hand, in this episode, the guest isn’t constantly arguing with Caleb to justify why he is in such financial straits. )
The thing is, the majority of Hammer’s guests are young, and regardless of whether they make a good income or not, they spend well past their means. In the comments of the videos, there are jokes about filling out the “bingo cards” because regardless of how unique the cases are that Hammer’s people try to find him, there are things that person after person do. Most of these people have purchased a car in the last couple of years, most at terrible interest rates. (A good number had a car before that they weren’t maintaining, and decided it was better to get a new car than to do repairs on the old one.) Most of these people have spending problems with a “I like it, I’m going to buy it” attitude. Most eat out an awful lot, including coffee on the go and/or drinks and snacks at gas stations. Most run multiple credit cards, and consider making the minimum payments as “paying off” the credit cards. There are a lot who take out payday loans. Student loans are also a big thing, and it’s crazy how many of these people were hanging their hopes on student loan forgiveness by the US government.
Then there’s Caleb himself, a young, kind of nerdy-looking guy who sits down with the guests to go through their debts and income and all. Yes, it’s part schtick, but Caleb goes nuts on many of the guests, many times screaming and berating the people sitting across from him. The thing is – most of these people seem to kind of need it. It’s like most of these people have never considered that not paying one’s debts is not a small character flaw; that this is something that will drag down their lives – and the lives of their children – for years and years to come if they don’t take care of it. He’s not nice to people about this at all.
And this is what has me wondering. His channel has been growing a lot, and while surely he gets some interest from the very clickbait thumbnails, crazy thumbnails aren’t enough to explain having over 1.8 million subscribers. He’s joked about it being a little like Jerry Springer, and with the situations and the yelling there, sure, there’s a bit of similarity, but I think there’s something else going on here that is deeper.
Hammer himself doesn’t really talk about his politics, but he definitely gives the impression of someone who is not “woke” at all; someone who is interested in facts, and who not only believes that facts don’t care about a person’s feelings, he’s going to be blunt in calling people into account for some very bad decisions. He’s not going to be convinced by excuses, and he’s not going to try to soften his approach to make people feel good; if anything, he’s more likely to double down.
The thing is, I think to a large number of Americans, especially those who are young, have been coddled to the point where hearing somebody speak the truth and do so boldly and unabashedly is a breath of fresh air. There are a lot of people in the comments who have stories of paying off debt the right way by emulating a lot of the steps that Caleb endorses. There are also a lot of people who have little stories of being tempted to, for example, stop for snacks in the middle of the day and say that imagining Caleb having a heart attack over it helps keep them from spending the extra money.
In some sense, too, the show is quite aspirational. He actually has a fairly wide range of incomes there – I’ve seen a range of ~$20,000 to ~$150,000 yearly for a single person – and in most cases, there is some sort of path forward without bankruptcy if the person is willing to absolutely buckle down and work on paying off the debt. However, the goal isn’t just getting these people to a point of breaking even, but to get them to start thinking about the next steps; having enough in an emergency fund for an actual emergency, starting to invest, etc., so that life does get to a point where it is more financially comfortable and one legitimately has more options in the future. This isn’t something that is strictly limited by income itself; it’s the sinking further and further into debt that limits a person’s opportunity more than anything. He’s certainly had people who were making good money on there be in worse shape than someone making a third of that because so many people who make more then spend more, getting themselves into more of a financial mess than someone who didn’t have an opportunity to get into as much debt.
It really is kind of the anti-snowflake show. People come on there, fully aware of how the show works, and I have to wonder if they do it because at some level, they know they need the truth to go forward, no matter how hard that truth may be. There are a few guests who are sympathetic from the very first minute, and with most, as they seem to begin to catch on to things, become so over the course of the hour or so, but every once in awhile, there’s someone who is so hard-headed, deceitful, or childish that the person watching is kind of rooting against him or her. That Caleb Hammer is the guy who is going to tell these people they can’t go off and travel or otherwise squander money while in debt to people who have never heard this before is compelling to watch, even without the theatrical elements that Hammer adds.
I’ve just been binge-watching these for a couple of weeks, and while I can’t whole-heartedly endorse them because of the language and adult humor, it hit me how much this seems to be a show that has caught the Zeitgeist in a big way; learning from the excesses of fantasy-land to face a truth that may be hard to face, but in the end has the possibility of setting one free.

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Lilla Rose Update – February 2025

For the latest Lilla Rose posts, please check out the following:
The author of this blog is a “Flexi Rep/Affiliate” with Lilla Rose, and is not employed by Lilla Rose. Purchases made through this link <https://www.lillarose.com/katja> will earn the author a commission.
Yes, it is late in the month, but maybe my strategy is like Mark Belling on WISN radio, who would give the hourly keyword to the radio contests with less than half an hour to go – in some cases – and would still manage to get contest winners! *L* I do miss him on the radio.
February’s “Mane Event” flexi is “Elizabeth“

February’s new releases:
My favorite is the one with the green – it’s called “Reagan“.
This month’s retail promotion is a free surprise hair stick with orders of $50 or more.
A lot of the new and featured stuff tends to run a little more expensive. With the flexis, in particular, you can sort from lowest priced to highest. Here you’ll see a bunch of things that have been on the website longer, including perennial favorites, and even without being on clearance, they’re starting at $11. Some of my favorites in this range are Steampunk and Freestyle, but my favorite of all time is Montana – seen in the featured photo of my hair on the post – which starts at $12.
I did miss posting the Valentine’s Day sale; most of the time, even as an affiliate, it’s not like we have a long heads-up on promotions, so as I am going to be working on getting back to being more consistent on the blog, hopefully I won’t be missing more of these things, because they do end up being really good deals.
https://www.lillarose.com/katja

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- Giving this post a “like”
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Thank you very much!








