"I'll admit I may have seen better days, but I'm still not to be had for the price of a cocktail, "(Margo Channing)
Rosebud
Snowglobes, I always think, are typically American in their appearance; true you see plastic cheap versions in British seaside tat shops, but for quality, nostalgia and "that certain something", you just cannot beat the Americans. One of my favourite possessions is my 5th Avenue snow globe , complete with Patrick's Cathedral,The Empire State Building and can you see right at the front? yes a little yellow taxi cab!
The History of the snowglobe ( From Wikipedia) is interesting
It isn't certain exactly when the first snow globe was made but they appear to date from France during the early 1800s, possibly as a natural successor to the glass paperweight, which had become popular a few years earlier. However, by 1879 at least five companies were producing snow globes and selling them throughout Europe.
In 1889 a snow globe containing a model of the newly built Eiffel Tower was produced to commemorate the International Exposition in Paris, which marked the centenary of the French Revolution. This quickly became a favourite souvenir for those attending.
Snow globes became popular in England during Victorian times and, in the early 1920s, crossed the Atlantic to the United States of America where they became a popular collectors item. Many of these were produced by the Atlas Crystal Works which had factories in both Germany and America.
The first US patent related to a snowglobe was granted in 1927 to Pennsylvania’s Joseph Garaja. Garaja then got Novelty Pool Ornaments to start manufacturing a fish version, underwater, in 1929
During the 1940s, snow globes were often used for advertising purposes in America whilst religious snow globes were common gifts for Catholic children in Europe during the 1940s and '50s. Even Hollywood was bitten by the snow globe bug, with globes featuring in a number of films over the years, the most famous of which was in the opening moments of the 1941 classic Citizen Kane.
At the end of the day
Today we had SPSS TEACHING, via a vod cast (voice with pictures) It took twice as long as the 18 year olds but by 14.00 I had mastered the software and at least could do what the instructor asked of me ( a soft scouse voice with no face)..Mind you I didn't quite understand what everything meant, but hey, that's for later!
Mel ( a staff nurse) from ITU rang me and asked if I could look after her student nurse in the morning! Hope we aren't too busy. I said yes but to realize I was all researched out and to keep her questions to spinal injuries.
Meg is still in season, and has hit fertility BIG STYLE, of course she is locked away in her crate and Finlay is busy sawing through the bars with a small hacksaw. Maddie is happy, having the entire house and masters to herself: there is a lot to be said for being infertile.....
A Scandinavian Tutor and Little Miss Sunshine
Took the dogs for a huge walk up the Gop, which was a trial, as the welsh sheep dogs from Gop Farm, had an inkling that Meg was in season and turned up on mass to shadow us!!! There were more hormones on that walk than an average Rugby game in Swansea.!
Then took the afternoon off and went to the pictures. Saw a funny little film called Little Miss Sunshine. A sleeper of a comedy which I think tried too hard to be cynical and dark, but failed as it just had just too much warmth and heart. It tells the story of the mother of all dysfunctional families, who get clumped together to take 9 year old Olive to appear in a "Little Miss Sunshine "child pageant. Standouts amid the family are Steve Carell as a suicidal, gay intellectual uncle, Toni Collette, as a hard pressed mother and Paul Dano, simply wonderfull as a mute, anger ridden teen brother. The film lapsed at times into farce
(when grandad was carried dead in the back of the camper van), which just didn't work!, but what did shine through was a score of very moving moments, that chronicled the characters' journey through life and its many difficulties.
(Right) Steve Carell and the vapid Paul Dano, seem to have all the best scenes as Uncle and Nephew.
Worry?..............We all do it!
Last week I had my "wobble" about University and today I was talking to my Friend Mike, who is having a tough time at work, so is having "his wobble" today!, and whilst on my 10.30 walk with the kids tonight got to thinking about how awful it is to worry about a problem that never seems to go away. Now most of us do not suffer this exaggeration from the norm! ...we have a problem, worry about it for a while then hopefully ( with the help of family, friends and the odd psychologist) we get over it! True that ice cold, overwhelming panic that can take you over is awful ( especially when it often occurs at 4.30 am) but it passes!! Having a chronic endogenous anxiety state must be the most debilitating condition, as it often never really goes away!
Anyhow that 4.30 am anxiety attack that we all Suffer from sometimes got me thinking of Everything and the Girl, and especially their song entitled We walk the same line!
Everything But The Girl - We Walk The Same Line
If you loose your faith, babe, you can have mine,
and if you're lost I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line.
Now I don't have to tell you
how slow the night can go,
I know you've watched for the light.
And I bet you could tell me
how slowly four follows three,
and you're most forlorn just before dawn.
So if you loose your faith babe,
you can have mine,
and if you're lost, I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line.
When it's dark baby,
there's a light I'll shine,
and if you're lost, I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line.
And I don't need reminding how loud the phone can ring
when you're waiting for news.
And that big old moon lights every corner of the room.
Your back aches from lying and your head aches from crying.
So if you loose your faith babe,you can have mine,
and if you're lost, I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line.
When it's dark baby,there's a light I'll shine,
and if you're lost, I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line.
And if these troubles should vanish like rain on midday,
well I've no doubt there'll be more.
And we can't run and we can't cheat,
cause babe when we meet
what we're afraid of,
we find out what we're made of.
So if you loose your faith babe,you can have mine,
and if you're lost,
I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line.
When it's dark baby,
there's a light I'll shine,
and if you're lost,
I'm right behind,
cause we walk the same line
I think that It is a lovely song,that tells the story of support from a loved one when you are out of control. The highlighted text, captures exactly that panicky cold feeling I mentioned before!
Well if that song helps you not, I always think that a film will , and my musings on tonight's walk came to that old chestnut My Best Friends Wedding. There is a scene in it when Julia Roberts becomes totally overwhelmed by the problems in her life. She is found sitting outside her hotel bedroom door by a friendly bellboy (Paul Giamatti), He offers her a fag and a piece of advice, to help her deal with her woes .He repeats an old Jewish saying
"This too shall pass...................."
So Mike remember "This too will pass!!!"
The full version of this seems to be a Bible saying
The origin of the saying "this too shall pass" appears to date back to a story told about King Solomon. It is said that the King, feeling blue, asked his advisors to find him a ring he had seen in a dream. "When I feel satisfied IÂm afraid that it wonÂt last. And when I donÂt, I am afraid my sorrow will go on forever. Find me the ring that will ease my suffering." Eventually an advisor met an old jeweler who carved into a simple gold band the Hebrew inscription "gam zeh yaÂavor" Â "this too shall pass." When the king received his ring and read the inscription his sorrows turned to joy and his joy to sorrows, and then both gave way to equanimity. More recently the saying has been popularized in the West by spiritual leaders imported from or inspired by the East, including Ram Dass, the Dali Lama and Tich Nhat Hanh.