Thanks Uncle Sam

What next?

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Lent is upon us

Tis the season...
to party your butt off on Tuesday -- Fat Tuesday, and then give up something you really love starting Wednesday -- Ash Wednesday! They (MWR) are supposed to have a party Tuesday night. I plan to go and give my contribution of moon pies and beads :) The following day there should be an Ash Wednesday service marking the beginning of Lent. I have decided to give up sweets (in the solid form) Monday through Friday! That means no ice cream, doughnuts, cakes, pies, or puddings during the week. I will try not to eat much on Saturday or Sunday, but given the fact that sweets have been my fix these past few weeks I wanted to at least start out realistic. I plan to drink mainly water (with lemon if needed), but will allow for sweet tea and coffee with cream and sugar. Are you going to a Mardi Gras Party this week(end)? And if you acknowledge the Lent season, what are you giving up?

Saturday, February 18, 2006

HAPPY 1 YEAR ANNIVERSARY!!!

Thursday, February 16, 2006

With Love...from Hubby

here is my new 2006 swimsuit!
it was purchased with love from my hubby ;)

have you started looking at new swimsuits for the year?
i suggest checking out VS. they have several swimsuits
economically priced, and others a bit more unique and
pricey.


question? how long do you keep swimsuits? what do you flaunt? what are you trying to hide? also...how long do you fake tan until you are ready to get in the real sun?

Tuesday, February 14, 2006


Wishing you a lovely Valentine's Day!
Make love, not war :)

Sunday, February 12, 2006

Almost February 14th...

Stars & Stripes Valentine Messages

Wondering who is serving your country? Want to know who's loved one is excited enough about Valentine's Day to embarress their service member with an online greeting? Or even an online photo?

I made one for William :)
It is short and sweet, yet without an embarressing photo. I know, I'm disappointed too.

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Want to be a part of an online Valentine?
Send Me & William or another favorite soldier a Valentine Greeting at Operation Love Our Troops!
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Wednesday, February 08, 2006

What might have been?



I had a dream of you last night. We were back in the states and apart from one another. You worked at an office type store, and was seeing someone else that I had to compete with via letters and music. I would slip them to you while you carried on a relationship with the other man. I did have one thing going for me though...you lived a few houses down from me, and I would periodically stop by to help with whatever. I was going by the store and leaving things as an excuse to see you. Of course, you were totally on to it and went with the flow and utimately we got together. I do believe that if our senario didnt work out the way it did, that I somehow would have still found you and pursued you in a manner to win your heart.
->>---> It now is my day to day purpose in life is to win your heart.

Just an interesting tid-bit from the hubby. Do you think you still would have ended up with the person you are with now if the situation had been different?

I'd like to think that we would have, given that he and I met several years before and it didn't work then. Since we didn't get the hint the first time, I think we were brought together for a second round of trying and it worked out that time. But you know...maybe we would have just kept running into each other coincidentally as if to keep being discreet until we saw the obviousness of it all.

By the way, Happy News is sharing love stories and other sticky sweet Valentine's stuff this month! If you are a writer I support your contribution to this website :)
For all my journalists, writers, English majors, ect. have you published anything lately?

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Saint Cecilia

I am to choose a saint that who will be my mentor. I am currently leaning toward St. Cecilia -- Patron Saint of Music.


In the fourth century appeared a Greek religious romance on the Loves of Cecilia and Valerian, written, like those of Chrysanthus and Daria, Julian and Basilissa, in glorification of the virginal life, and with the purpose of taking the place of the sensual romances of Daphnis and Chloe, Chereas and Callirhoe, etc., which were then popular. There may have been a foundation of fact on which the story was built up; but the Roman Calendar of the fourth century, and the Carthaginian Calendar of the fifth make no mention of Cecilia.
It is said, however, that there was a church dedicated to S. Cecilia in Rome in the fifth century, in which Pope Symmachus held a council in 500. But Symmachus held no council in that year. That held at Easter, 502, was in the "basilica Julii"; that on September 1, 505, was held in the "basilica Sessoriana"; that on October 23, 501, was in "porticu beati Petri apostoli que appelatur Palmaria." The next synod, November 6, 502, met in the church of St. Peter; that in 533, "ante confessionem beati Petri"; and that in 503 also in the basilica of S. Peter. Consequently, till better evidence is produced, we must conclude that S. Cecilia was not known or venerated in Rome till about the time when Pope Gelasius (496) introduced her name into his Sacramentary. In 821, however, there was an old church fallen into decay with the dedication to S. Cecilia; but Pope Paschal I dreamed that the body of the saint lay in the cemetery of S. Celestas, along with that of her husband Valerian. He accordingly looked for them and found them, or, at all events, some bodies, as was probable, in the catacombs, which he was pleased to regard as those of Cecilia nd Valerian. And he translated these relics to the church of S. Cecilia, and founded a monastery in their honor.
The story of S. Cecilia is not without beauty and merit. There was in the city of Rome a virgin named Cecilia, who was given in marriage to a youth named Valerian. She wore sackcloth next to her skin, and fasted, and invoked the saints and angels and virgins, beseeching them to guard her virginity. And she said to her husband, "I will tell you a secret if you will swear not to reveal it to anyone." And when he swore, she added, "There is an angel who watches me, and wards off from me any who would touch me." He said, "Dearest, if this be true, show me the angel." "That can only be if you will believe in one God, and be baptized."
She sent him to Pope S. Urban (223-230), who baptized him; and when he returned, he saw Cecilia praying in her chamber, and an angel by her with flaming wings, holding two crowns of roses and lilies, which he placed on their heads, and then vanished. Shortly after, Tibertius, the brother of Valerian, entered, and wondered at the fragrance and beauty of the flowers at that season of the year.
When he heard the story of how they had obtained these crowns, he also consented to be baptized. After their baptism the two brothers devoted themselves to burying the martyrs slain daily by the prefect of the city, Turcius Almachius. [There was no prefect of that name.] They were arrested and brought before the prefect, and when they refused to sacrifice to the gods were executed with the sword.
In the meantime, S. Cecilia, by preaching had converted four hundred persons, whom Pope Urban forthwith baptized. Then Cecilia was arrested, and condemned to be suffocated in the baths. She was shut in for a night and a day, and the fires were heaped up, and made to glow and roar their utmost, but Cecilia did not even break out into perspiration through the heat. When Almachius heard this he sent an executioner to cut off her head in the bath. The man struck thrice without being able to sever the head from the trunk. He left her bleeding, and she lived three days. Crowds came to her, and collected her blood with napkins and sponges, whilst she preached to them or prayed. At the end of that period she died, and was buried by Pope Urban and his deacons.
Alexander Severus, who was emperor when Urban was Pope, did not persecute the Church, though it is possible some Christians may have suffered in his reign. Herodian says that no person was condemned during the reign of Alexander, except according to the usual course of the law and by judges of the strictest integrity. A few Christians may have suffered, but there can have been no furious persecutions, such as is described in the Acts as waged by the apocryphal prefect, Turcius Almachius.
Urbanus was the prefect of the city, and Ulpian, who had much influence at the beginning of Alexander's reign as principal secretary of the emperor and commander of the Pretorian Guards, is thought to have encouraged persecution. Usuardus makes Cecilia suffer under Commodus. Molanus transfers the martyrdom to the reign of Marcus Aurelius. But it is idle to expect to extract history from romance.
In 1599 Cardinal Paul Emilius Sfondrati, nephew of Pope Gregory XIV, rebuilt the church of S. Cecilia.

St. Cecilia is regarded as the patroness of music [because of the story that she heard heavenly music in her heart when she was married], and is represented in art with an organ or organ-pipes in her hand.

From The Lives of the Saints by the Rev. S. Baring-Gould, M.A., published in 1914 in Edinburgh.

To find your Patron Saint visit Catholic.org.
or look for a saint who is celebrated on your birthday!