Miscellaneous Things.

  • I did manage to get some art stuff done this morning. I started going through the different kinds of paper I have and got some of it sorted out. This is good because I had them all piled up higgledy-piggledy in the corner. Actually, what surprised me the most was that I had some unfinished work I couldn’t really remember even starting, and some of it was not at all bad.
  • {I am noticing how difficult it is to say I think something I have done is good!}
  • I now have almost everything from Barbara Hambly ‘s earlier books that have been Kindlized. I even broke down and got her vampire books, although on the whole, I really don’t like vampire books.
  • Going back to getting stuff done, I really don’t enjoy days when I get nothing done. But when I DO get stuff done, I prefer it to be things I want to get done rather than things like cleaning that have to be done. Although I have to say I do appreciate my little Eureka steam floor cleaner. It is cute and easy to push around  and does a good job!
  • When I am finished here, I must go out and fill up both bird feeders. I will be pleased when the grackles move on. I have taken to waving my arms in my room when I see them. They fly off in response to something suddenly moving! Oh, and I think the pooping robin has given up landing on my car since I went out the other day when I saw him and slammed the door and yelled at him. I think I traumatized him and it doesn’t worry me one bit!
  • I have just finished watching "The King’s Speech." It was very good. Since I was a stutterer in my teen years, I was fascinated to see him doing all the things that I was encouraged to do in my elocution lessons. For example, he was told to sing what he wanted to say and when I did that, I realized that since I could sing smoothly, I could learn to speak smoothly, too. I remember quite clearly what a huge feeling of relief this gave me. The movie ended when the King made his "we are at war with Germany" speech. I was familiar with that speech but I am not sure why since I was only five when he gave it. I don’t remember hearing it at the time it was given, but I was familiar with it.  I was fascinated to see a picture of the king just as I remembered him and a recording of him giving the speech. I liked George VI and I remember crying when he died because he was "my king," the one who had encouraged us to be brave and deal with all the chaos and shortages of WW2. I know we always listened to his speeches on the radio and that we always felt he was talking to us, not just making a speech. Churchill had that same gift, the gift of talking to individuals… Apparently Churchill had a speech impediment too, although I had never heard that before. He was "tongue-tied" and according to the movie, that is why his speech was so slow and deliberate. Oddly enough, I was told as a child that I also had to have the piece of skin under my tongue cut when I was very young. I don’t remember this at all but my parents were told I was "tongue-tied." Anyway, I highly recommend this movie.

 

Some people try to turn back their odometers. Not me, I want people

to know why I look this way. I’ve traveled a long way and some of the

roads weren’t paved.

Will Rogers

"I yam what I yam."

Popeye

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April 21, 2011

I’ve heard many good things about that movie. I wonder if it is a book, too? hugs, Nicky

April 21, 2011

Very interesting paragraph about “The King’s Speech” and your experiences. I haven’t heard about someone being “tongue-tied” for many years. I wonder if they still do that little operation. I’ll have to go googling!

April 21, 2011

I love listening to your perspective! It is amazing to think you have experienced so much history!

April 21, 2011

I heard that movie was well worth watching. I think the next time we rent I’ll get that as one of them. We have some friends who have 3 kids and all 3 had to get the skin uder their tongues clipped as well. Hugs,M

Thanks for the product review on the steam cleaner. I well remember hearing King George VI on the radio, also the day he died and we heard those dramatic words in a classroom announcement, “The King is dead, long live the Queen.” I liked him.

April 21, 2011

I have the King’s Speech to watch too. I’m hoping to get it in this weekend — I had a bit of a stammer as a child, and took lessons to learn how to deal with it. GVI I have found to be a very impressive monarch, and rather quiet about it too — he never did seem to have that overweening pride that his elder brother did. And his wife was just as interesting — quite a backbone she had. I’ve alwaysfelt that they were precisely the two people that the UK needed during WW2, and that they gave everything that they had.

April 22, 2011

My mom has been telling me to see The Kings Speech. She liked it too. Guess I will have to give in, huh?