Offline
ollieceb wrote:
Hi guys! back from Scotland. Trying to catch up as much of the time was unable to get wifi.
Happy to see the pic of Maks and Meryl in Mi, and the one last night with Jenna. BTW, someone asked what lyrem is that Jenna put in her post. It's Meryl spelled backwards. They started that when they were in Hawaii together. Trying to catch up with laundry and sleep. Glad to be back on this ship.
Hey, Ollie---glad to see you are back! Hope you had a memorable time in Scotland!!
Offline
CEK40 wrote:
Found this on Tumblr...
Saw this and thought about our SS Maksyl. Block out the negativity and focus on what we all saw!!
AMEN--ride the tide and listen to Maks!!!
Offline
CEK40 wrote:
What does this mean and who do you think it is for....
[list=1]
[*]Jenna Johnson @Dance10Jenna 33m"A real man gives a lady the attention she deserves, gives her all of his love, calls her beautiful, and treats her like a queen."
[/list]
Had heard somewhere that she and Val had split---but who knows if that is credible info.
Offline
Booky wrote:
CEK40 wrote:
What does this mean and who do you think it is for....
[list=1]
[*]Jenna Johnson @Dance10Jenna 33m"A real man gives a lady the attention she deserves, gives her all of his love, calls her beautiful, and treats her like a queen."
[/list]Hi CEK! My first thought was that she's referring to Val. Those two appear to be on the outs.
Okay, need to go back and catch up on all the posts. I'm way behind! Later!
Hey, Booky....glad to "see" you!
Offline
LuvSeason18 wrote:
CEK40 wrote:
Found this on Tumblr...
Saw this and thought about our SS Maksyl. Block out the negativity and focus on what we all saw!!
So true and a perfect saying for our ship........our new motto. LOL
Nice!
Offline
thecarriebradshaw wrote:
ollieceb wrote:
Hi guys! back from Scotland. Trying to catch up as much of the time was unable to get wifi.
Happy to see the pic of Maks and Meryl in Mi, and the one last night with Jenna. BTW, someone asked what lyrem is that Jenna put in her post. It's Meryl spelled backwards. They started that when they were in Hawaii together. Trying to catch up with laundry and sleep. Glad to be back on this ship.Hi Ollie!!!!! Welcome back :o) hope you had a great trip :o)
Hey Carrie. Did you remember to tweet Meryl our ice bucket cake pic the other nite? Since she replied to the guy who saw her in SLC airport, think we might get a reply?! Could still do it if you didn't get a chance to before.
Offline
Ok Annie....here is that interview...FINALLY!!!
!bIr5WC
Offline
KeepOnSinging wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
annieahoy wrote:
Thanks so much. Oh, I used to adore Glen Campbell. I just read that he has now been put into some type of facility because of Alzheimer's. This breaks my heart; also, I worry about getting it myself as my mother died from that. I know why it is called "The Long Goodbye".
KOS: Thanks for all the lovely songs you post for us to enjoy! Love hearing about your musical experiences. I love music and really enjoyed learning music through piano lessons, band, etc. as a youngster. I can still plunk out a few things on the piano if I try hard!!!
My mom (93 last month) has had Alzheimer's for, now, at least 10 years (that we know of). She is well cared for in a home for AD patients in their last stages of the disease but it is heart breaking to see the changes in her--and to know that she is living her worst fear. She is in VA so will see her in October. Always difficult, but, yes, "The Long Goodbye".
"To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven." Ecc 3:1Annie and Jet, AD is such an awful disease. And "living her worst fear." captures the essence of the disease. I have watched a dear friend, one who was full of laughter and joy, become a very different person because of this disease. And I have always loved Ecc. 3:1.
It is so sad, but life is not fair. We visit Mom when we go to VA for us, not for her. She knows nothing and it is so sad; but these things are a part of life and we have to just take the lessons we can from them. Not sure what this lesson is--other than patience and knowing it is in God's hands, not ours--and that we can't know the reasons for everything. Just accept what is and be thankful for this day.
Offline
KeepOnSinging wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
KeepOnSinging wrote:
Hi Jetmama,
I know that you are already logged off, but am waving hi in hopes that you see this tomorrow. Was fascinated by your and Gunnerk's conversation about quilting. I do not quilt. Best I can do is sew hems, mend seams, and sew on buttons. But I do love beautiful quilts, and I loved the musical "Quilters." My daughter played a supporting lead role in this show when she was in college. I was so taken with the depth of the dialogue that I ended out going every night of the ten days that it was performed. It reminded me that in 1977 at the beginning of our family's journey dealing with the mental illness of a father and husband, my mom insisted that my husband and I take a four day vacation to Berea, Kentucky where I saw a magnificent display of quilts from throughout Kentucky and the United States. I looked at quilts and quilting with different eyes after that.
Each gorgeous quilt was different. And as I watched this musical ten nights in a row in 1992, the closing lines from Sarah, the main character described the quilt making process and described what I believe was at least part of what St. Paul meant when he said that we were "to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling" and it reminded (what a tame word) me of seeing those magnificent quilts in Berea, Kentucky in 1977.
The musical is about pioneer women traveling west and the grief and joy and very difficult decisions they have to make. These are among the closing lines.
Sarah: "And He showed me a river of pure water of life, clear as crystal proceeding out of the throne of God and the Lamb."
Daughters: "And on either side of the river there was a Tree of Life....., and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations....."
Sarah: "You can't always change things. Sometimes you don't have no control over the way things go. Hail ruins the crop or the fire burns you out. And then you're given just so much to work with in a life, and you have to do the best you can with what you got. The materials is passed on to you or is all you can afford to buy....that's just what's given to you. Your fate. But the way you put them together is your business. You can put them together in any order you like. Piecing is orderly."
So I thank you and Gunnerk for bringing these memories to the front of my mind. I was even able to find these lines from "Quilters", lines that I had tucked away over twenty years ago.
Awwwwww, KOS, that is so kind! Thanks for sharing your memories of the quilt show and the musical. I think my interest in quilting is tied to its history--and then to my own. My BA is in history and I love the pioneering spirit. Perhaps I was born about 75 years too early--but appreciation of what the pioneers went through is no doubt more nostalgic than it would have been actually living the life. Yes, piecing is orderly--and it is also creative. I have grown to love scrappy quilts the best because they represent how pioneer women went about their craft--using up the leftovers, no two ever being the same. Of course, quilting goes back to Europe and probably other cultures well before the birth of America--but the utilitarian spirit and the spirit of America show up in our quilting compared with that of other countries where quilts were more limited to the elite classes.
My paternal grandmother first introduced me to sewing--by just watching her and then being the recipient of matching dresses she made for my sister and me. Later in her life (she died in 1965) she made a number of quilts from a collection of fabrics she hand selected; she only made either "Grandmother's Flower Garden" or "Double Wedding Ring". I have since "inherited" her leftovers and am in the process of putting together more flowers from pieces she had cut before she died (!). Gma's flower garden pretty much has to be hand pieced (all hexagons) so it is a good take-along project. I hope to eventually have enough flowers to put together a quilt for each of our 4 granddaughters. My gosh--I really need to get MOVING!! HAHA
I just love that our interests seem to all mesh and/or bring up fond memories in one another.I have always associated quilting with anything other than the elite class. How interesting that quilts were associated with the elites in Europe. And I too have four granddaughters, but they do not have a grandma who is good with quilting. It continues to be fun to learn more and more what we share in common. And I expect one day to find out that you and Gunnerk have actually spent face time with each other.
Hope so!
Offline
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
CEK40 wrote:
That look before the twizzles....
SMASHING! I just love that dance--and you could soooo see their feelings toward each other that nite. Thanks, CEK!
I was on again, off again about whether this was a showmance or real romance until this dance. And IMO it was not just that Meryl was an athlete that the dance had so much power in it. Real love gives you power and wings. In this dance more than any other, they were soaring with lots of direct eye contact.