29.11.08

more Thanksgiving goodness...



I cooked the turkey...



I also decorated the table. It wasn't as pretty as I'm sure Camie's was, but Dollar Tree was my friend for this little creation...


I also made pumpkin pie, salad, salad dressing, and cherry pie.

[special thanks to cindi for her cooking advice and help]

Happy Belated Thanksgiving


Here I am, two days later, still full after two Thanksgiving dinners one at my house and the other at Jeff's. Despite the unruly amount of amazingly delicious food, I had such a great time getting to know Jeff's family more and getting to know their friends, Paul, Pam, and Jake. I wish I had taken a picture of sitting around the table with them. We talked about a myriad of different things for about four hours.

First we ate with my family. Brett and Halie had it worse than Jeff and I. Three Thanksgiving dinners...



22.11.08

Thanksgiving Break



Can you say, it's about time? Not that I won't have plenty to do with three group projects due the week I return from school, I am excited to be able to lay around and do the projects from home. I am working on a magazine for my Visual Rhetoric class, and I am loving it. Who knew that creating a magazine would be so fun? I'm kind of excited to spend all my time designing it.

8.11.08

rough draft of thought


I just read a very interesting essay by Mary Wollstonecraft called "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman." It was eye-opening for me. I have never been so caught up in an essay from the Romantic period of literature as I was by this essay. She made some amazing points about how genders are raised to be the way that they are. The sentence that really got my attention was in the first paragraph. "Men, in their youth, are prepared for professions, and marriage is not considered as the grand feature in their lives; whilst women, on the contrary, have no other scheme to sharpen their faculties" (Wollstonecraft 189). I am a romantic feminist, I suppose. I really enjoy reading a lot of the feminist literature of this time period because it isn't too far reaching, and it makes sense to me. Mary Wollstonecraft discusses the importance of a mother's education. "In the regulation of a family, in the education of children, understanding in an unsophistacated sense, is particularly required: strength both of body and mind" (Wollstonecraft 192).



For me, this essay meant a lot because it described to me why sometimes I depend a little too much on emotion instead of sense. I believe the strength of the female sex can come from being able to balance sense and sensibility, not going too far in one direction or the other. Just some thoughts of the day... They may not make sense, but it is a rough draft of thought.


A lot of my Titanic pictures can be found at Make it Count.

2.11.08

versailles and more


Jeffrey and I are going to Europe. Oh my gosh, it will be so, so much fun!!! We leave in May for some of the most amazing places on Earth, including Versailles, a place I have been dying to see since I can remember. YAY!!!

engaged


Brett finally proposed to Halie. YAY! They will be married on December 27th. Congratulations. I love you, Halie!

a new layout


Landon had Titanic playing on the TV while I was on my computer, and I realized how much I really love that movie. Obsession. Adoration. Whatever. My new layout is dedicated to that amazing, romantic, epic film... I'll never let go...