WOW!
Best book of all of them. She did it! (Zen Moment!)
That's all I will say.
One more WOW!
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I waited until it was past midnight to talk about superstitions.
At a meeting in a hospital on Thursday something was said about something
surely turning out right. There was some subtle tapping on the table
with knuckles. Then one of the meetings members stood up and said to
the presenter that she had to find wood quickly on knock on it. This
was one medical professional to another.
Contrary to the opinion of some, this does revolve around me. I write
about what I see, read, feel, touch, hear, taste and so on.
Most people I see knocking do it unconsciously and subtly.
Sit in a bar during a sporting event and say something good about the home team.
Then observe how many people, both men and women, will knock without saying
anything, or in the extreme, moan and knock.
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As I sit here at my home desk getting ready to leave for work, the thought occurred to me, is this the July 4th weekend or is next? I asked my wife and she, in her wise way, said "Neither. This is the July 4th week." Ah!
She may have something there. It sounds suspiciously French, but still worth creating an Institute or at the very least, a congressional committee to study. Instead of putting holidays on a Monday, to create the three day weekend; put them on a Wednesday to create the holiday week!
Pure Genius!
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This is an attempt at writing around a posted photograph of this sock dumping in Croton-on-Hudson. Sock dumping is the traditional greeting god-daughters giver their god-mothers.
It is believed this custom started with the Dutch settlers who adapted it from the local indigenous people's custom of dumping flowers. Originally the Dutch tried it with their wooden clogs, but after a few unexpected fatalities, the switched to socks, clean socks. This is the tradition that follows us today. Though it was used in the City of New York until the late 17th Century, it is only in Croton-on-Hudson it is actively used.
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In a little side note in the help file mentioned in the last entry regarding w:bloggar, there was a comment regarding Windows Liver Writer. Being always willing to experiment, I installed it.
The only problem I was having was with the site URL. It was totally my fault. I was putting in the dashboard URL instead of that for the blog itself. Once I corrected that line, the rest of the installation was automatic.
Let's see how it looks when published...
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