So I refinanced my house today. That was different
Womack ,'The Message'
Natter 70: Hookers and Blow
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Husband went to an interview for a contract position south of Portland today, and no luck. Not worth working five hours away from home for six months. Back to the drawing board.
I keep looking at the local shelter website and thinking that I want to get a dog. I've never had a dog before. I should probably learn something about taking care of dogs before I start looking into adopting one.
For books set on an island, these really don't mention the water or fish or ships all that much.
Anne's House of Dreams is actually set on the shore, and there is a lighthouse nearby where they hang out with the keeper. And Gilbert has to take a boat across the harbor sometimes.
But I think it's a class thing: the "gentry" are the farmers and professionals, and the lower class are the fishermen and people who mess about with boats. And Anne, for all her poor beginnings, is definitely aspirational middle- to upper-class.
Also maybe ethnicity, because there are the occasional derogatory comments about French-speaking people.
I keep looking at the local shelter website and thinking that I want to get a dog. I've never had a dog before. I should probably learn something about taking care of dogs before I start looking into adopting one.
Go volunteer at a rescue? Tell them you would be a first-time dog owner. A good rescue will match you with a starter doggie. (eeee! not biased at all)
Also maybe ethnicity, because there are the occasional derogatory comments about French-speaking people.
Oh, yeah. Lots of those. At least twice, when some kind of food or cooking has been screwed up, someone says something like, "Feed it to the pig. It's not even fit to give the French boy." And pretty much all the French characters we see are the faithful but somewhat stupid and superstitious servants.
Go volunteer at a rescue? Tell them you would be a first-time dog owner. A good rescue will match you with a starter doggie. (eeee! not biased at all)
I love little dogs (like, beagle-sized and smaller), but I'm scared of big dogs. I'm not sure if I could volunteer just with the little ones. I tried volunteering on the cat side of the shelter, but I discovered that, while my allergies don't really have any objection to one or two cats, they object a whole lot to 30 cats.
I think a shelter ought to respect it if you don't want to interact with big dogs. Little dogs need to be walked too, and it's not in anyone's best interests to have someone working with larger dogs who's not comfortable with them.
There are lots of individual breed rescue groups you could get involved with to start.
Man, so this week I was a good bit anxious about the start of the new school year. Lots of transitions in the partnering orgs staffs, lots of new kids.
But I just had a great time today. AND I finally have my high schoolers back. (Their previous dorm parents had them on the lockdown, but are gone this year, so Return of My Students!) They are so much my demographic.
I really enjoyed it, and I remembered that I'm good at what I do. Fuck yeah, new school year!
There are breed-specific rescues; maybe you could find one of them?
And I am now reminded that my nice mover made a derogatory comment against the French!