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Printed from https://writing.com/main/profile.php/blog/kenzie/sort_by/entry_order DESC, entry_creation_time DESC/page/2
by Kenzie
Rated: ASR · Book · Writing · #1160028
Fibro fog, pain, writing sandwiched in between. Quotes. Sermon notes. Encouragement.
A Texas Sunrise

Sunrise on Surfside Beach, Texas

A friend, William Taylor, took this picture. He visits Surfside Beach with his dogs almost every morning, watching the sun rise while the dogs prance about at the water's edge.

This is only about ten miles from where I lived in Lake Jackson, Texas. Sadly, I only visited this beach about four times in the six years I lived nearby.




Each day is a challenge. A challenge to get by without thinking about the fibromyalgia pains. A challenge to stay awake when chronic fatigure wants to take over. And a challenge to navigate through fibro fog.

I haven't been writing as much as in the past. For years, I wrote at least 500 words a day. Now, I'm lucky if I write 500 words in month. Sigh.

For more information about what my day (or life) is all about with fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, chronic pains, IBS, depression and everything else thrown in, check this out:

It's a New Day  (E)
My pain and welcome to it.
#1028189 by Kenzie


Sunrise on Surfside Beach, Texas
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October 26, 2022 at 4:54pm
October 26, 2022 at 4:54pm
#1039784
"Pity the man who has a favorite restaurant, but not a favorite author. He's picked out a favorite place to feed his body, but he doesn't have a favorite place to feed his mind!" - Jim Rohn


Rose signature

"My Favorite Neighbor
"Sharing Sunshine...It's What I Do!
"Admirable Women
"Whose Work Are You Stealing?
"The Potter's Cup and Saucer
September 11, 2022 at 1:39pm
September 11, 2022 at 1:39pm
#1037617

Remember 9/11?


For days, weeks afterward, we WERE NOT divided by race, gender or political parties. We were AMERICAN. Period.

Will we ever be that united again?
February 3, 2021 at 3:59am
February 3, 2021 at 3:59am
#1003538
Did you know that the swine flu only killed one person, but the swine flu vaccine killed 30 and paralyzed 450? Yep. That was a vaccine that President Carter had rushed to production in 1976.

People always use the polio vaccine as an example of why we should be embracing vaccines. Sure. But did you know that Cutter Laboratories, the company that produced the vaccine made a horrible mistake in the first version of the vaccine? Yep. They injected 120,000 with the vaccine with live polio virus in it and infected 70,000 of them – crippling 164 and killing 10.

Don’t get confused. Big Pharma didn’t make vaccines out of the goodness of their hearts. They are scheduled to make billions upon billions of dollars. You may not be paying for the vaccines, but they are not free. And they have not been fully tested. It usually takes as much as 15 years to create vaccines. And that’s the normal type of vaccines. These are different. And we don’t know the long term effects. But we can be sure that Big Pharma – since the 80s – is not responsible for injuries or deaths due to vaccines. That’s where the vaccine court comes into play, but most people don’t even know it exists. We also don’t know about settlements because the vaccine court puts gag orders on each and every settlement.





Daisy Sig from PassItOn

"My Favorite Neighbor
"Sharing Sunshine...It's What I Do!
"Admirable Women
"Whose Work Are You Stealing?
"The Potter's Cup and Saucer
February 3, 2021 at 2:58am
February 3, 2021 at 2:58am
#1003537
Homicides in:

•Los Angeles increased by 30 percent;
•New York increased by 40 percent; and
•Chicago increased by a staggering 50 percent.

Omaha, Oklahoma City, and Memphis all experienced a more than 50% increase in homicides during the same time period.
Some so-called experts don’t understand why all crimes haven’t increased.

Ummm…property crimes decreased because people spent much more time at home in 2020, and routine burglaries usually skip occupied houses. When shops are closed, there's no shoplifting and fewer larcenies. DUH!!

We’ve also had…
Increases in domestic violence.
Increases in financial problems.
Increases in isolation.
Increases in alcohol and drug abuse.
Increases in social unrest.
And increases in suicides. Worldwide.

For the sake of our country, urge your mayors and governors to allow businesses, churches and schools to open up.

The number of covid deaths is not what they’re claiming. Remember way back last spring, Dr. Birx told us on live TV that when a person died from cancer or heart problems, and yes, even from accidents, if he/she tested positive for covid, the death was recorded as covid. They told us this was happening. And so did loved ones who had people die.

The CDC website had had deaths listed as PIC – or pneumonia, influenza and covid – all lumped together. (Further, if you take time on the CDC website, you’ll discover that they admit and no one ever dies from flu. They did from “complications from flu” – usually pneumonia.)

The inventor of the PCR test has been saying for the past year that it was not designed to test covid and that most of the test results would be false positives. Sure enough, the CDC and WHO finally admitted the same thing. As many as 90% of tests recorded as positive were likely false positives.

So, following that….the people who died from cancer, heart attacks, car accidents…who supposedly tested positive for covid and were, therefore, counted as covid deaths could have been false positive cases. As many as 90% could have been false positives. They should never have been counted as covid deaths in the first place. But now that we know about the possible false positive tests, those deaths should absolutely be reclassified to show the real reasons people died.




Rose signature

"My Favorite Neighbor
"Sharing Sunshine...It's What I Do!
"Admirable Women
"Whose Work Are You Stealing?
"The Potter's Cup and Saucer
January 21, 2020 at 2:05am
January 21, 2020 at 2:05am
#973847


If you’re going to be passionate about something, be passionate about learning.
If you’re going to fight something, fight for those in need.
If you’re going to lose something lose your inhibitions.
If you’re going to gain something, gain respect and confidence.
And if you’re going to hate something, hate the false idea that you are not capable of your dreams.

—Daniel Golston





Awww.  Such a cute angel.

"My Favorite Neighbor
"Sharing Sunshine...It's What I Do!
"Admirable Women
"Whose Work Are You Stealing?
"The Potter's Cup and Saucer
January 2, 2020 at 8:36am
January 2, 2020 at 8:36am
#972455

Did you know that our stupid government paid NIH $4,658,865 to tell them whether or not drinking more results in more trips to the ER. Surprise. Yeppers. It does.

You know....I would have gladly told them that for about 1/4 as money.

You know what else? Bob Dylan, songwriter of the 60s is a sculptor. Our State Dept. paid him almost $85,000 for a statue outside the U.S. Embassy in Mozambique. It turns out that every time our government builds an office in a foreign country, they earmark .05% of the cost of the building for a sculpture to sit outside for the government employees to enjoy. Or ignore. The higher the cost of the building, the more they can spend on art.

Hmmm.



January 2, 2020 at 8:12am
January 2, 2020 at 8:12am
#972452



It amazes me that people think that President Trump isn't bright.

I've worked for big companies, I've worked for builders and architects and engineers, for plumbers - the ones who put bathrooms in hotels and high rises. I've also owned my own small business.

I've been an avid reader all of my life and I have been a writer since I was a child and was first published as a teen.

My own life experience tells me that Donald Trump is brilliant. When people say, "find out what rich people do and do that" they're talking about President Trump, not the crooks in our government.





November 22, 2017 at 1:38pm
November 22, 2017 at 1:38pm
#924188
November 22, 1963.

The day started out like any other. I was in 6th grade. There were so many of us that we didn't fit in the elementary school, so we attended school in the basement of the junior high. There were 150 of us, split into 3 classes. Yes, we had 50 kids in each class, and we learned.

My teacher was a HUGE guy. He was the first male teacher we'd had and he scared us all. :)

We were like orphans in that basement. We rarely went back to the elementary school, although occasionally we did for some concert or something. And we never participated in any of the junior high activities.

The only interaction we might have with junior high students was with the guys (and a few gals) who took wood shop or metal shop. Those were also in the basement. So was the rifle range, also mostly used by male students.

The shop teachers were scary dudes with HUGE paddles with holes in them. We knew that only because sometimes when we were on the way to the restroom, we saw one of the shop guys being paddled. They never flinched.

We were taking French, so our French teacher was at the front of our classroom that day, and our regular teacher was off somewhere when the first announcement came over the intercom that President Kennedy had been shot.

Not long after that, the loud speaker squawked again and we listened as a news guy cried as he told us all that our President had died.

Our French teacher said, "they cannot keep us from praying at a time like this" (because prayer had been outlawed in the classrooms) and so we all prayed together and cried. Then the girls all ran to the restroom so we could hug and cry together and sit on the floor. The boys all stood in the hallway hugging too and trying not to show emotions but having a rough time of that.

I don't remember the ride home on the school bus that day. But I do remember sitting on the floor of the living room for days watching the news and funeral coverage with my mother and grandmother. Thinking back now, I wonder what my younger brother and sister were doing while we were so absorbed.

After that, my mother bought every book and magazine that she could find about the assassination and the aftermath and she and I poured over them. That continued for about a decade or more for us. We wanted to try to understand how and why our President was shot.
September 14, 2017 at 7:01pm
September 14, 2017 at 7:01pm
#920346
You know how sometimes you just have to share a few words? A few minutes ago, a thought popped into my head that I had to share.

We're supposed to soar, not coast.

Isaiah 40:31 NIV - but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.



Daisy Sig from PassItOn

"My Favorite Neighbor
"Sharing Sunshine...It's What I Do!
"Admirable Women
"Whose Work Are You Stealing?
"The Potter's Cup and Saucer
May 9, 2017 at 1:15pm
May 9, 2017 at 1:15pm
#910781
I love, love, love, the word ponder. Dictionary.com (isn't that YOUR favorite go to place for everything dictionary?) says that it means to consider something deeply and thoroughly, to meditate over, to weigh carefully, to consider thoughtfully. Imagine if we, the people who love to write, actually spent more time pondering stuff, you know, like life and love, and....politics..... But wait, we probably all spend too much time on politics these days. *Smile* Or do we....???

Anyway, this is something I posted on Facebook today.

Something to ponder. Look what's happening in Europe. Then remember that they are farther ahead of the USA in secularization. They have beautiful churches and cathedrals that are no longer used for worship. Back in the 90s when I was placing foreign exchange students into homes in FL, I learned that when they called themselves Christian, it actually meant that they weren't atheists. Most had never been inside a church and were quite surprised to learn that family life in the US would mean attending church, Sunday school and youth group. Today, French and German students would find that many Christians in the US have also never been inside a church. How easy it is for evil to take up residence in a country where Christians do not fellowship together nor are they regularly fed the Word of God.
February 21, 2017 at 2:49pm
February 21, 2017 at 2:49pm
#905181
I got a catalog in the mail recently. I flipped it open and the first thing I saw was a $2500 sofa. I knew right away that I had not requested that catalog. *Smile*

We often get catalogs and magazines delivered to the wrong addresses in our subdivision. They will either be for someone on our street with an entirely different address number or someone with the same house number on a parallel street. I did wonder which one of my neighbors might have won the lottery, considering the cost of the merchandise in the catalog.

But when I looked at the address....my address has 4 numbers in it, and the address on the catalog had 3 numbers in it, 3 of the 4 in mine. The street name was the same, except that ours has an "e" on the end, and that street name did not. We're an avenue, and the intended recipient lived on a road. And you know what else? We're in Cincinnati, and the intended recipient lives in Batesville, Indiana! Seriously.

And here's the kicker. I tried to give the catalog back to the mailman (sorry, he's a guy *Smile* ) but he told me that he would just throw it away since it was just a catalog and not a bill or even a magazine someone had paid for. I told him that sometimes catalog companies also charge for catalogs, but he didn't seem concerned.



February 9, 2017 at 4:38pm
February 9, 2017 at 4:38pm
#904319


As I was driving back from the bank the other day, I saw a sign in front of a pizza joint. The sign said, "Four cheese pizza. Three bold flavors."

Huh?

February 3, 2017 at 12:59pm
February 3, 2017 at 12:59pm
#903864
If we were in the middle of a zombie apocalypse the left would find a way to protest for zombies’ rights

Please stop asking "how stupid can they get?" Liberals seem to be taking that as a challenge.
January 31, 2017 at 11:43am
January 31, 2017 at 11:43am
#903616
The newspaper obviously wants to stir up trouble. They titled my piece about quilts and melting pots, "Immigration without assimilation is invasion."

http://www.cincinnati.com/story/opinion/contributors/2017/01/31/immigration-with...
January 31, 2017 at 12:03am
January 31, 2017 at 12:03am
#903584
See the entry below about a melting pot and quilt? I submitted that as a letter to the editor or guest column in our local newspaper. Supposedly they'll be publishing it online tonight and in the newspaper tomorrow. *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile*
January 29, 2017 at 3:33pm
January 29, 2017 at 3:33pm
#903440
We used to be a melting pot, now we're just a quilt
by Marilyn Mackenzie

We used to be a melting pot. People came to America because they wanted to be us. They wanted to be Americans. America was an example of a melting pot where immigrants and people from all over the world visited and lived and shared thoughts and ideas to create one big new culture. At least that's the way it once was.

As a baby boomer growing up in Pittsburgh, the influence of so many cultures was evident in the foods we ate and the words we used regularly. If you Google "Pittsburghese" you'll find that Pennsylvania Dutch and even Yiddish words were sprinkled into our vocabulary. Family dinners showed our melting pot worked in the kitchen. Glumpkies and real Italian spaghetti or lasagna were served regularly. And the real evidence came at Christmas time, when our mothers baked cookies made from recipes shared by German, Polish, Scottish and English neighbors.

Today, liberals like to say that America is a quilt. I love quilts. Quilts are beautiful. But you can make a quilt with none of the squares being like any other.

America was great as a melting pot. It's not so great as a quilt. Today, immigrants come here not to be us, not to be Americans. They come to get what we have instead.

Immigration without assimilation is invasion. We have to stop allowing people to invade our shores who have no intention to become like us, but who want our country to become like the ones that they fled.

I have a wonderful memory of my brother, at only two years of age, teaching the Polish grandmother living next door to us simple words in English. Although she was quite old, she knew that to be a real American, she had to be able to speak English.

Yes, some of us want that America again. And that's why we selected Donald Trump for president. We want our melting pot back. The quilt has got to go.
January 26, 2017 at 10:25am
January 26, 2017 at 10:25am
#903211
Note to self. Add David Muir to list of newsertainment people to ignore.
January 26, 2017 at 10:20am
January 26, 2017 at 10:20am
#903209

First people from every corner of the US said that Donald Trump could never, would never be president. But the crowds swelled, and politicians and the media ignored them all. And Donald Trump is definitely our president. (We don't need to get into a conversation about the popular vote. Our presidents are elected by the electoral college, and thank God our founders were smart in that regard, otherwise each and every time California and New York would choose our presidents and the rest of us might as well stay home.) Yes, he's our president.

Then those same naysayers, from any and all sides, said that Donal Trump could never, would never follow through on his campaign promises. But, again, he's doing just that very thing. *Smile* Donald Trump has done more for our country in five days than our previous president did in eight years!

Now the naysayers are coming forth pointing out the things that President Trump has not done yet. Seriously? It's only been a few days. But some of them want to know, "WHEN IS HE GOING TO FIX OUR INFRASTRUCTURE?!??!!"

I think that it's precious that liberals now think that he's Superman, able to accomplish everything in just a few days. As I said, he has done more in five days than Obama did in eight years. But he's also human. HE HAS TO GET HIS USUAL FOUR HOURS SLEEP.

*BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile* *BigSmile*








January 25, 2017 at 7:17pm
January 25, 2017 at 7:17pm
#903159
Some liberal on Twitter put me in 3 of her groups - bstsh*t crazy, crackpots for Jesus, and really bad writers. I resent that last one. *BigSmile*
June 13, 2015 at 11:10am
June 13, 2015 at 11:10am
#851534
Sometimes you find helpful things on Facebook. I saw a graphic that I liked. It said, "Alot is not a word. You do not write alittle, abunch, acantaloupe, or aporkchop. Stop writing alot."

That one sure did get
A LOT of discussion. The most "intellectual" amongst the commenters said that if society changes, then the dictionary eventually changes.

I suppose that means that since people on social media cannot figure out whether to use their, there or they're that eventually it won't matter, at least according to that gentleman.

In the meantime, it still does matter. The TX newspaper for which I worked over a decade ago still uses "a lot" and "they're/there/their" as some of the tests to determine whether or not one gets hired.

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