Thursday, February 01, 2007






Since I still can't find my battery charger, I thought I would upload some of my favorite photos that are in jeopardy of being lost forever. This was Spencer's Halloween costume



before I went back to work full-time (read, when I had time to make their costumes). A couple of action shots of Michaela.

Today has been a typical work day, with me spending all my time trying to create compelling data for Honda to consider purchasing. It is hard to be the "Top Rep" when the sales cycle is so long (one project I have been working on since last May) that by the time it happens, it hardly feels like a win.

The other day, Michaela was trying to trick Spencer by saying "get busy on your homework" in what she thought sounded like me. Spencer was not fooled. He came to tattle to me and said, "she sounds like Elmo with puberty on his throat." I guess it is time to clarify puberty for the kids. What a great laugh!

Enough for now...love to all.

Tuesday, January 30, 2007


It is a lovely rainy day here in California. I was having a little trouble concentrating on my work so I took a long bath. No one can say I'm not motivated. I loved this article in the paper and wanted to share with those I love.


Quit your whining, if you can
By Stephanie Simon, Times Staff WriterJanuary 27, 2007

Gentle reminder
click to enlarge
Highlands Ranch, Colo. — MY first attempt at a complaint-free life lasted 15 minutes.Dropping the kids at school five days after a blizzard, I found the parking lot impassible and the sidewalks treacherous. "This place is a disaster!" I called to the principal.And instantly regretted it.Why harp on a situation no one could control? I should have thanked the principal for standing in the cold to make sure his students got in safely — or brightened his day with a cheery hello.I had resolved to quit grumbling after reading about a challenge presented to the congregation of Christ Church Unity in Kansas City, Mo. The Rev. Will Bowen — fed up with folks whining about his choice of worship music — asked his flock of 250 to refrain from complaining, criticizing and gossiping for three weeks.Bowen, 47, is a big fan of self-help programs. A few years back, he and his wife erased more than $40,000 in debt by following the financial makeover plan advocated by syndicated radio host Dave Ramsey. Lately, Bowen's been hooked on the writings of a fellow Unity minister, Edwene Gaines, who promises prosperity through positive thinking.Gaines proposed the concept of a complaint-free church in her book "The Four Spiritual Laws of Prosperity: A Simple Guide to Unlimited Abundance." Then Bowen came up with a gimmick to make it stick. A former radio-station manager and phonebook ad salesman — he turned to ministry four years ago — Bowen delights in giveaways. Every few weeks, he interrupts his service by distributing small gifts: picture frames, perhaps, or candles or bookmarks. "Doodad Sunday," he calls it.For the no-complaint sermon last summer, he handed out purple rubber bracelets stamped with the word SPIRIT. (They were intended for school pep rallies, but Bowen figured "spirit" could also signify the spirit of change.) Bowen told his congregants that they were to switch the bracelet to their other wrist every time they griped or sniped. Their goal: 21 consecutive days without moving the bracelet.Bowen used a quote from writer Maya Angelou as the campaign slogan: "If you don't like something, change it. If you can't change it, change your attitude. Don't complain."If only it were that simple.Before taking the challenge, Bowen had always considered himself sunny: "My job is to see God, and good, in everything."He soon realized he wasn't as imperturbable as he'd thought, especially when his beloved Kansas City Royals were blowing yet another baseball game. Some Sundays, he'd take the pulpit and confess: "I moved that bracelet 20 times this week. I wanted to take it off and throw it in a drawer."It took Bowen three months before he made it through 21 days without complaining. "And it helped," he said, "that I was on a silent retreat for three of those days."Many in his congregation worked hard to follow his example. Tom Alyea, 44, learned to keep his headaches to himself, even when he could have used a little sympathy from his wife. Linda LeMieux, 53, trained herself not to chide her husband when he drove too fast. (Though she did sometimes read aloud speed-limit signs — just for his information.)Terry Rennack, 53, had a harder time. "I work with computers — in a government environment," he said. "So, yeah. Believe me. This is the toughest thing I've ever had to do."Rennack complained about work. He complained about red lights. He complained that his no-complaint bracelet was getting stretched because he switched wrists so often. As the weeks went by, he began to realize how much he allowed trivial frustrations to dictate his mood. "It was a very humbling experience," he said.With the purple bracelet as his guide, Rennack learned to stay serene in the face of setbacks, to listen more and mouth off less. It took him three months, but he made it to 21 days, earning a "Certificate of Happiness" and the chance to hang his well-worn purple bracelet on a plastic tree in the church lobby.So far, 18 members of the congregation have met the challenge. Many more are still working at it.I slipped up time and again in the early going. I criticized my oldest daughter for (of all things) singing happily at the breakfast table, and dismissed a sculpture at the Denver Art Museum with a disdainful: "That's so ugly!"Slowly, though, I started to get the hang of it. I didn't say a word when my computer crashed or when my shower was ice-cold. I even kept mum when my husband spent a half-hour wrestling with our son before bed. Not so much as a "told you so" when the little guy was so hyped up he had trouble falling asleep.
At one point, I went two days without complaining. Even when I lapsed, I noticed my grumbles were muted.I also noticed that my family was not taking my success well. I was chirpy (and, worse yet, smug about my good cheer) until something irritated me. Then, I sulked. Instead of coming right out with a critique, I'd give everyone the silent treatment.Our family discussions had always been loving, but spiked with sarcasm, teasing and good-natured grumbling. Now I was censoring every word, and our easy give-and-take suffered.Many in Bowen's congregation praised the bracelets for bringing their families closer; I wondered where I was going wrong."People deal with life in different ways," psychologist Barbara Held reassured me. A professor at Bowdoin College in Maine, Held resents what she calls "the tyranny of the positive." In her book "Stop Smiling, Start Kvetching: A 5-Step Guide to Creative Complaining," she urges Americans to drop the pretense that everything is always rosy."Maybe I should start selling 'It's OK to complain' bracelets," she said.She'd probably sell a bundle. The urge to complain is so universal, it's recently been elevated to an art. Under the coordination of two Helsinki artists, citizens in several cities have created "Complaints Choirs" to sing aloud their grievances about unfaithful lovers, reeking buses, even drunken plumbers.Bowen dreams of countering such negativity with an army of positive thinkers.He has spent $10,000 in church funds (not that the board would think of complaining) to give away about 70,000 purple bracelets, taking requests through his website, http://www.thecomplaintfreechurch.org/ . Soldiers in Iraq have put in orders. So have pastors, teachers, drug counselors, Boy Scout leaders. (Perhaps not grasping the concept, one minister returned his batch — with a complaint about the quality.) An elderly woman in Florida requested one, explaining that most of her friends had passed away but that she was determined not to be bitter in her loneliness.On a recent afternoon, Bowen bounded cheerfully among a dozen volunteers filling orders. Two bracelets to Colfax, Calif.; 500 to Papillion, Neb.; 1,000 to a natural foods store in Wenatchee, Wash. Stacks of manila envelopes and taped-up shoeboxes filled the room.After more than four hours of counting bracelets and sealing envelopes, Kim Martin, 52, let out a small whoop of relief. "Looks like we're done!" she said.But that very moment, Robin Stanley headed her way, carrying an overlooked stack of mailing labels. "We got more," said Stanley, 53.Martin took a deep breath."Yea!" she said, attempting a chipper tone.Bowen came over to check on them. "I'm tired," Stanley told him, adding: "That's not a complaint. Just a statement of fact. I didn't realize what a production this was."Listening, I realized that I may have been taking the complaint-free life too literally.It wasn't reasonable to suppress every remark or tone of voice that could be construed as a complaint. Even Bowen and his wife stretched the rules a bit. When someone irritated them, they'd remark, "I bet he sure can whistle." It was an inside joke, a way of saying that even the most aggravating souls have a ray of good in them. It was also, perhaps, a way to vent in code."Everything comes down to the energy you put into it," Bowen said. "If I say calmly, 'I smashed my finger last week and it still hurts,' that's a statement of fact. But if I'm whining, 'Oooh, I hurt my finger! It hurts so bad!' then that's complaining…. And 99% of it is not beneficial."Back home after visiting the church, I put aside my purple bracelet. But I resolved to keep watching my words.When the fourth big storm in a month dumped eight more inches of snow on our neighborhood, I made a point of not starting every conversation with a grumpy "Can you believe this weather?" Instead, I remarked on the beauty of the white-capped Rockies.I think it gave my neighbors a lift. How could it not? The mountains truly are stunning.Then again, the view only goes so far when you're driving the kids to school on roads rutted with hard-packed snow and ice. It would be great if the county could send a plow. That's not a complaint. Just a statement of fact.


Enough for now...love to all