Posted on Nov 19th, 2007
by
Andy
Beef Stew. I got a late start and we didn't eat until 8 that night. When I was married, my family ate together nearly every night. I usually would cook. For sixteen years, that was the routine. After my divorce, my interest in cooking evaporated. When I have my kids, we still have meals together but I have been buying a lot of take out. This past Wednesday, I made the stew and changed the recipe slightly. Its not really that much of a recipe, rather simple. Brown stew meat in oil. Add four cups of water and lipton cup of soup mix. Simmer one hour. Add carrots simmer 15 minutes. Add potatos and an onion and cook for another half an hour. Add butter/flour mixture to thicken . Worchestershire sauce, salt and pepper. This time, I added the butter and flour mixture right after the potatos and let it cook nearly the full half hour. Cooking is a labor of love. The slow rise of anticipation in the family as the smells drift through the house. Is it ready? Is it ready? Set the table. Get out the place mats and napkins. Pour the milk. It's ready....can you pass the rolls.
Posted on Nov 15th, 2007
by
Andy
Creativity is a colorform. Taking down the pictures, our experiences and knowledge, from the sticky black background of our established thought, setting them on the floor, and rearranging them in new and different ways.
New creative thought or ideas. A friend told me yesterday of a girl with autism who was being tested. The doctors were debating whether she was retarded or incapable of being tested. One of the doctors was convinced she was not retarded based on a recurring question."What if black is not the darkest color?" While the other doctors dismissed the statement quickly with, "But black is the darkest color." This one doctor said, "Okay, what if black is not the darkest color." To which she replied, "Then we would use it to lighten the room."
Posted on Nov 14th, 2007
by
Andy
Air Pudding
"The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassinations from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and undernourishment." Robert Maynard Hutchins (1899-1977)
An informed public is the cornerstone of democracy. However, the mainstream media is more concerned with viewership than their stewardship. There are plenty of news programs but its more a question of what is news. The competition for the public's attention has led to sensationalism and meaningless coverage, impacted the quality of candidates running for public office, and started us down the road of indifference and apathy.
What should the media do? Do their job. Report what SHOULD be reported.
Posted on Nov 9th, 2007
by
Andy
"Miss Twiggley's Tree by Dorothea Warren Fox. " That's how I would start the book each time I read it to my kids. My copy is worn with love. The tape that holds the the pages together is yellowing and evidence of chocholate fingers from my childhood still remain. The author may have also done the illustrations. On the cover, Miss Twiggley and Puss are at play. Miss Twiggley, hurling out from beneath the branches of her willow tree on a single rope, is a girl trapped in a woman's body. Puss is seated in a swing beside her . "Funny Miss Twiggley, Lived in a tree, With a dog named Puss, And a color TV" That's how the story starts. A woman and her dog living life. Miss Twiggley is older, certainly over 30, probably closer to 50, and Puss is a dog who can go grocery shopping. They fly kites and associate with bears. They have a house that....it's a treehouse with all the amenities. It rocks!!! Miss Twiggley and Puss are different though....and people don't like different. The people and dogs in town are mean and critical of their treehouse lifestyle. But when a hurricane causes a flood, Miss Twiggley and Puss open their home to even their most vocal critics. In the process everyone learns that they should be tolerant of each others differences and that despite any differences, there are friendships to be made.
Posted on Nov 5th, 2007
by
Andy
We could load them onto catapults and launch them at contestants of a new reality show...a techno-refuse gauntlet ... the couch potato challenge. Overweight, soft in the middle Americans huffing and puffing their way through a series of obstacles while TV's crash down upon them.