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Monday, January 12, 2009
"Disbelief and Relief"
![]() "Why'd the financial collapse have to happen on my watch?"
I'm so glad our country will soon be under better leadership. |

Thursday, January 15, 2009
"More Whining"
1:09am
Feeling weakly...
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I'm on day three of a sinus headache. It hurts, (whine, whine, whine;). I went to bed at 7:00pm last night, and woke up around 11:30pm. I'll go back to back after I post this entry. I hope all of you are well or at least on the mend.
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Friday, January 16, 2009 A
"Stages of Life"
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Friday, January 16, 2009 B
"(Colorfully) Pale and Sickly"
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Saturday, January 17, 2009
"Tempting Housewares and Good Fortunes"
Some lovely colorful veggies and a promise of freebies got us sitting in for a lecture on waterless cooking. I always knew aluminum pots were bad, being a suspected cause of alzheimers, and before I'd even moved out on my own twenty five years ago I'd assembled a small collection of stainless steel cookware, with either aluminum or copper undersides (to aid in even cooking, while being far away from the cooking surface). The lively demonstrator showed how badly the aluminum pots leach. The iron pans also leach nasty stuff, such as bacteria in the old oils they soak up. The teflon coated pans can be terrible, as well. I sought the straight dope on this:
"Do pans coated with Teflon, known to science as polytetrafluoroethylene or PTFE, emit a gas that kills birds? Normally no, occasionally yes. PTFE poisoning, also called Teflon toxicity, occurs mainly when PTFE-coated pots, pans, or utensils overheat. Teflon is fairly stable at typical cooking temperatures, but heat it above 500 degrees and it starts to emit fumes that can sicken you and make a bird drop dead. People usually don't let their cookware get that hot, but it can happen if you preheat a dry pan, use a Teflon-coated drip tray, or just allow a Teflon-coated pot to boil dry. The emissions can lead to polymer fume fever, which DuPont, the maker of Teflon, warns can cause flulike symptoms in humans. Most sufferers recover quickly without treatment, but the medical journals mention instances of pulmonary edema, pneumonitis, and (rarely) death."
Laura preferred a teflon pan, which got really nasty, because, yes, she cooked with extremely high heat. The teflon got burnt and I could tell it was gradually wearing away (and into our foods). Julia hated it as well,
so three and a half years ago I got a nice Calphalon tri-ply stainless steel ten inch pan, and I know it's made for healthier eating.
But, no, as nice as our cookware is, it doesn't enable the 'waterless' cooking. However, the cost of the very fancy pots, with their specially vented lids, was very prohibitive. So I waved good bye to the 299 dollar one quart cooking pot. That twenty five year old Farberware is still serving us well. However, I was about to get lured in by a relatively cheap fifty buck cookie sheet, when Julia reminded me that we have never once baked cookies!
I am very easily lured in by 'shiny things'.
![]() An old favorite when it was new...
After our small adventures at the home and garden show, we went to Jeannie Wah's for our favorite pan fried noodles. I tried their sweet potato fries, also delicious and not greasy. I smiled at my fortune, "The star of riches is shining on you.". However I grinned even wider at Julia's fortune, "You have a good head for matters of money." Yes, she does. She saved us fifty bucks and the space taken by a shiny thing that would have only gathered dust!
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Sunday, January 18, 2009
"Piecing Together the Memories"
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in the shadows voices are speaking whose voices? and with what glittering tongue? angels perhaps? or is it the divine pieces of remembered Self? It's all coming back to me now. Little by little, light fragment by light fragment, easing into recognition. I think I have it, here, here and there. Touching there, there, and here. All I have to do is listen.
In the first place,
But they had expectations of me,
The long walk to school,
Fear then waited in the corner,
Then back home,
Chocolate pudding comforts,
All the cold of the night,
A repetition of days.
All there in itchy dresses and
Day after day,
After what seemed forever,
Soon friends and smiles,
Long days of this rhythm,
Though gray uncertainty still rode my shoulder,
I was scared, too,
I wanted gone from the scene,
But the bed was cleaner and warmer,
Afraid to smile at what greeted me in the mirror,
But the soothing seemed false,
(The beginning of the end,
Terrible world,
Who was this god of theirs?
And I could see adults were afraid
But so much fear was everywhere
I screamed, too, silently,
I had to rebuild myself,
But it was enough
Entering first lone room,
But I would be ready for them, |
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© Joan Lansberry