Exceedingly Mundane

tidbits of random nothingness

Apr
23
Posted by Stace

Menu Plan Monday

Menu Planning Monday

OK, I am trying to do better this week with trying new recipes. Cross your fingers and hope for the best! The weekend is up in the air, so I don’t know whether I’ll be here cooking some, or we’ll be eating out a lot. Hope everyone has a great week!

As always, thanks to Laura over at OrgJunkie for hosting this every week. Be sure to stop on over and check everyone’s menu!

Monday – Grilled Chicken (Tim) / Grilled Salmon (Stacy), sugar snap peas or green beans, rice

Tuesday – new recipe, Stacy’s (Vader’s Mom) Crockpot Lime Chicken Tacos, guacamole, beans

Wednesday – breakfast burritoes, oatmeal (Light Night before Tim weighs in at work)

Thursday new recipe for Crockpot Italian Wedding Soup, salad, bread

Friday – TBD or Date Night

Sat/Sun – TBD

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Apr
21
Posted by Stace

Finished “Beach Road”

Beach Road by James PattersonI finished another book last night, “Beach Road” by James Patterson. This was my first Patterson book (except for “Suzanne’s Diary for Nicholas” which I read in 2005, but I believe that book was not your typical Patterson book), and I must say, I did enjoy it! I might have found a new author to read πŸ™‚ The chapters were really short, which actually made for pretty quick reading. It was easy to read, a good plot (I didn’t see the ending coming, but that’s just me, I never figure plots out!) and it wasn’t too gruesome. I had heard that some of his works are (maybe some of the Women’s Murder Club books or his Alex Cross books), but this one was not that bad at all. The last Nora Roberts book I read, “Blue Smoke” had more graphic and gruesome depictions than this book. This book covers murder, rape, drug deals, race relations and assorted other topics in a really good little story. I’ll definitely be looking for more Patterson books at my local library in the future.

For the record, that makes 27 books read so far, with a total of 8,761 pages read. Up next is a fairly new Lori Wick book I bought earlier this year, “White Chocolate Moments”. I haven’t read the best reviews on it, so my hopes aren’t up too high, but I’m still hoping it is enjoyable, light and even predictable. After that, I will probably forge ahead with the next Stephanie Plum book (Ten Big Ones) or else one of the three library books I am on the waiting list for. If any of them ever come available πŸ™‚

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Apr
20
Posted by Stace

Friday Feast Meme

Friday Feast Meme

Feast One Hundred & Forty
April 20, 2007

Appetizer
What is your favorite kind of bread?
Good grief, what kind of bread don’t I like? I love most any bread hot out of the oven with butter slathered all over it.

Soup
When was the last time you bought a new pillow?
Not that long ago, probably within the last 6 months. And I’ll be buying new ones soon. Tim is very hard on pillows and I buy 1-2 sets a year. I wash them a lot. Oh, and just yesterday, I bought some pillow protectors, but I haven’t taken them out of the package yet to try them.

Salad
Approximately how many hours per week do you spend surfing the Γ’β‚¬Λœnet?
Oh wow, we REALLY don’t want to go there, do we? Let’s just say, too much

Main Course
WhatÒ€ℒs the highest you remember your temperature being?
I have no idea, maybe 103º

Dessert
Fill in the blanks: When I ____________, I _____________.
When I am tired, I am really grumpy and irritable. πŸ™‚

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Apr
19
Posted by Stace

QOTD – Yawning

Question of the DayOK, today’s Question of the Day is short and simple – when you see someone else yawn, do you yawn? I always, always do. I am totally convinced that yawning is contagious. Tim, on the other hand, doesn’t think so and swears up and down that he doesn’t yawn when he sees someone else doing it.

So, how about you? When you see someone else yawn, do you?!

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Apr
19
Posted by Stace

A Second Book Meme

OK, this seems to be the day for book-related memes. Maybe I can post another “Question of the Day” later today, since more people seem to like those than my book and movie reviews. Hehehe!

As seen on Debi’s blog here:

1. What are you currently reading? My first “real” James Patterson book, “Beach Road”. I’m a little ways into it and it is good, but the style of this book is a little different from what I normally read. I’m not sure if this is typical for Patterson, or it is just this book. Very short chapters. Each chapter told from a different character’s point of view. Makes for quick reading, but it is a little different.

2. What did you just finish reading? I just finished “Everyone Worth Knowing” by Lauren Weisberger. (Review here.) This was my first book by Weisberger. I also have a copy of the paperback version of “Devil Wears Prada” that I will read one day. Several people commented that Prada was better, so I’m looking forward to that.

3. What will you be reading next? Well, I’m trying to work on my TBR pile. I have tentatively lined up “Ten Big Ones” by Janet Evanovich and then “White Chocolate Moments” by Lori Wick as the next ones. Of course, I reserve the right to change that at any time. I have not read a lot of good things about Lori Wick’s book, so I am not sure about that one. Also, I had blogged a while ago that my library FINALLY got an online reservation system in place. I’m testing it out and I have been put on the list for two newly released books, so if one of them becomes available, I will stop and go get it to read.

Let me know if you decide to play along, so I can stop by and see what you are reading, and going to read next πŸ™‚

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Apr
19
Posted by Stace

Booking Through Thursday

Booking Through Thursday Meme

‘Fess Up!

Okay, there must be something you read that’s a guilty pleasure . . . a Harlequin romance stashed under the mattress. A cheesy sci-fi book tucked in the back of the freezer. A celebrity biography, a phoned-in Western . . . something that you’d really rather not be spotted reading. Even just a novel if you’re a die-hard non-fiction fan. Come on, confess. We won’t hold it against you!

Another really timely book-related question for me. Considering I just blogged about a book I just finished a couple of days ago, “Everyone Worth Knowing”, which I described as a “guilty pleasure”. I don’t normally read books like this, but I do from time to time. Books like this one, like the Stephanie Plum books by Janet Evanovich, etc – these are the kinds of books that I read for a change, for a diversion, and as a guilty pleasure. I try not to delve into the Harlequin realm, this is as close as I’ll go. I don’t read the other types mentioned, or really anything else that I would classify in this category. I mostly read “women’s fiction” and Christian fiction, so these are a true diversion for me.

Good question!

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Apr
18
Posted by Stace

QOTD – Cookies

Chocolate Chip CookiesTime for another Question of the Day! Let’s have a little fun today. Who doesn’t like cookies, right?

Well, we don’t! We love cookies πŸ™‚ I’d have to say that it would be hard for me to pick between chocolate chip cookies and Oreo’s as my favorite cookie. Then, there’s Fig Newtons, and I love a good white chocolate macadamia nut cookie. Oh, and a good oatmeal cookie with nuts or raisins. Yeah, baby! Hmmm, I need to bake some cookies soon! In the mean time, we have a bag of Oreo’s around here. Bad news. Tim won’t win the weight loss challenge at work this week, LOL! But, hey, Kroger had them on sale for 1.88, so who am I to turn down a bargain?!

How about you? What’s your favorite cookie? That’s today’s Question of the Day… Leave me a comment and let me know!

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Apr
18
Posted by Stace

“The Wrong Funeral”

I got this in an email from a dear friend of mine. Rather than just passing it on via email, I thought I would just post it here. Hope you enjoy it!

Consumed by my loss, I didn’t notice the hardness of the pew where I sat. I was at the funeral of my dearest friend — my mother. She finally had lost her long battle with cancer. The hurt was so intense, I found it hard to breathe at times. Always supportive, Mother clapped loudest at my school plays, held a box of tissues while listening to my first heartbreak, comforted me at my father’s death, encouraged me in college, and prayed for me my entire life.

When mother’s illness was diagnosed, my sister had a new baby and my brother had recently married his childhood sweetheart, so it fell on me, the 27-year-old middle child without entanglements, to take care of her.

I counted it an honor. “What now, Lord?” I asked sitting in church. My life stretched out before me as an empty abyss. My brother sat stoically with his face toward the cross while clutching his wife’s hand. My sister sat slumped against her husband’s shoulder, his arms around her as she cradled their child. All so deeply grieving, no one noticed I sat alone. My place had been with our mother, preparing her meals, helping her walk, taking her to the doctor, seeing to her medication, reading the Bible together.

Now she was with the Lord. My work was finished, and I was alone. I heard a door open and slam shut at the back of the church. Quick & steady footsteps hurried along the carpeted floor. An exasperated young man looked around briefly and then sat next to me. He folded his hands and placed them on his lap. His eyes were brimming with tears. He began to sniffle. “I’m late,” he explained, though no explanation was necessary. After several eulogies, he leaned over and commented, “Why do they keep calling Mary by the name of ‘Margaret?” “Because that was her name Margaret, never Mary. No one called her “Mary,” I whispered! I wondered why this person
couldn’t have sat on the other side of the church.

He interrupted my grieving with his tears and fidgeting. Who was this stranger anyway? “No, that isn’t correct,” he insisted, as several people glanced over at us whispering, “Her name is Mary, Mary Peters.”

“That isn’t who this is.” “Isn’t this the Lutheran church?” “No, the Lutheran church is across the street.” “Oh.” “I believe you’re at the wrong funeral, Sir.”

The solemnness of the occasion mixed with the realization of the man’s mistake bubbled up inside me and came out as laughter. I cupped my hands over my face, hoping it would be interpreted as sobs. The creaking pew gave me away. Sharp looks from other mourners only made the situation seem more hilarious. I peeked at the bewildered, misguided man seated beside me.

He was laughing too, as he glanced around, deciding it was too late for an uneventful exit. I imagined Mother laughing. At the final “Amen,” we darted out a door and into the parking lot.

“I do believe we’ll be the talk of the town,” he smiled. He said his name was Rick and since he had missed his aunt’s funeral, asked me out for a cup of coffee. That afternoon began a lifelong journey for me with this man who attended the wrong funeral, but was in the right place. A year after our meeting, we were married at a country church where he was the assistant pastor. This time we both arrived at the same church, right on time.

In my time of sorrow, God gave me laughter. In place of loneliness, God gave me love. This past June we celebrated our twenty-second wedding anniversary. Whenever anyone asks us how we met, Rick tells them, “Her mother and my Aunt Mary introduced us, and it’s truly a match made in heaven.”

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Apr
17
Posted by Stace

The Desk

OK, so I was tagged by Debi, then prompted by my sister Gail, and then tagged by Judi to show a photo of my desk. Well. This one is a toughie… I don’t have a desk!

See, I had a desktop PC for the last 3 years, but we bought me a laptop last month (March), for our anniversary. The reason being that my husband is working more and more from home, and he needed a desktop space more than I did. So, we got me a laptop so he could take over the desk in our home office area (spare bedroom where we keep all of the computers, craft stuff and just junk in general!).

But, since everyone asked so nicely, here’s what I could come up with:

Here’s Tim’s desk:
Desk in the office

And, when I snuck in to take a picture, Tim caught me before I could sneak back out. He asked what I was doing, and I explained it to him. Then, he gets a big grin on his face and says “why don’t you take a pictures of the MESS up under the desk?”. He knows I don’t like to advertise how messy certain areas of our house are on my blog, or to people in general. This one is entirely his doing though. When we had problems with Hambones a few weeks ago, he had to pull everything out to work on the hardware. Needless to say, he didn’t “tidy” things up when he finished. So this mess of wires is NOT my doing πŸ˜€

Messy Wires
P.S. That’s Hambones folks, both of those PC’s and all of those wires!

Lastly, in lieu of a desk, I’ll show you where my laptop resides the majority of the time. Sitting on the ottoman next to my favorite chair, which is next to a window overlooking my backyard. I can see lots from this vantage spot, so it’s one of my favorite places:
Laptop Zone

OK, I know you’re supposed to tag someone, but I’m not in a tagging mood. If you’d like to play along, that would be superduperfantabulous πŸ™‚ Just leave me a comment so I can come check out your desk or work area πŸ˜€

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Everyone Worth Knowing by Lauren WeisbergerI finished another book last night, one I picked up at a recent library sale. It’s called “Everyone Worth Knowing” and apparently is the second book by Lauren Weisberger, who wrote “The Devil Wears Prada”. I also own this one in paperback (thanks to a different library sale), but I have not read it. I saw the Prada movie, so I wanted to read something that I didn’t already know the plot to. Anyway, I liked the book, didn’t love it, but I did enjoy it. In a really guilty, hide-in-the-corner kind of way. Sort of like you would toss a People or celebrity magazine in your shopping cart, but not really advertise that you read those kind of things. πŸ™‚

Rather than trying to write my own review, I’m going to copy this directly from Amazon.com, as it really sums it up:

Lauren Weisberger, whose bestselling debut The Devil Wears Prada outed the vicious antics of the magazine industry elite, is back at it with Everyone Worth Knowing, another cautionary tale of sex, power, and fame. This time around, the PR industry is her target, and Prada fans will recognize similar themes throughout this entertaining, if at times overly dramatic, exposé.
Bette Robinson is a twentysomething Emory graduate who shunned her parents’ hippie ideals in favor of a high-paying yet excruciatingly boring job at a prestigious investment bank. One day, after a particularly condescending exchange with her boss (who sends her daily inspirational e-mails), Bette walks out on her job in a huff. After a few weeks of sleeping late, watching Dr. Phil and entertaining her dog Millington, Bette’s uncle scores her a job at an up-and-coming public relations firm, where her entire job seems to revolve around staying out late partying and providing fodder for clandestine gossip columns. What follows is one episode after another of Bette climbing up the social ladder at the expense of her friends, family, and the one guy who actually seems worth pursuing.

Weisberger is clever enough to turn seemingly outrageous circumstances into amusing anecdotes, like the tale of a woman who was close to suicide until she found out she was only 18 months away from scoring a highly coveted Birkin bag (“You simply cannot kill yourself when you’re that close … it’s just not an option.”). This wit, combined a hint of voyeurism that most of us can’t deny, is what makes Everyone Worth Knowing a guilty pleasure that’s well worth the indulgence.

Guilty pleasure – that’s exactly how I’d sum it up. Sometimes, it is sort of fun for me to break out and read something that is “deliciously entertaining” as the cover proclaims. It does have a bit of sex, drugs and bad language in it, but not so much that it was too overly distracting to me. It fit in with the partying theme of the book. It had a bit of heart to it as well, and a little substance, although not too much. πŸ™‚ Not enough to take away from the fun of the book, but enough to give it a redeeming quality!

For the record, that makes 26 books read so far this year, with a total of 8,371 pages. Up next is another library book I picked up recently, “Beach Road” by James Patterson. Believe it or not, this is the first “real” Patterson book I’ve ever read. I have read one other by him, “Suzanne’s Diary for Nicholas”, back in 2005, but I don’t think that is his typical type of book. So, I thought I’d give one of his murder mysteries a try. If you’ve read this one or have another Patterson book to recommend (or any book, for that matter), let me know!

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Apr
16
Posted by Stace

Some Movie Reviews

So, if you also read my Project365 photoblog, you already know that we did the whole big “eat bad food, watch several movies” thing over the weekend. It’s something I’ve been wanting to do for a while. We’re really behind on seeing a lot of movies that have been out on DVD for the last few months. Plus, I’ve been really craving pizza. So, Saturday we ordered Papa John’s pizza (the Works, and we tried their little dessert cinna-pizza) and then on Sunday, we ordered take out Chinese from the place a few blocks from our house. Yummy! Tim always gets chicken with garlic sauce (spicy) and I always get shrimp with broccoli. We ordered some steamed dumplings, which is my most favorite thing that this particular place makes.

Anyway, here’s the movies we rented:
Movies

I thought I would do some quick movie reviews, then I got to thinking – I basically always like the movies we watch and the books I read! I am not a very good person to give a thoughtful, insightful kind of review. I just like to escape and I like to be entertained. I don’t like to really analyze the movies and dissect them. I just like to watch them and enjoy them πŸ™‚

We liked all 3 movies, but we did enjoy “The Illusionist” the best. Very good movie, with a good plot, good characters and actors, and it was actually fairly clean. We both give it an 8 out of 10. The other two movies, we liked for different reasons. “My Super Ex-Girlfriend” is so lite and cheesy and campy, and even though it has a bit of off-color humor and crassness to it (and a bit of bad language), it is just so easy to laugh along to all of its silliness. We give it a 7 out of 10. The last movie was one I rented purely for myself, “A Good Year“. I had read the book “A Year in Provence” by Peter Mayle a couple of years ago and enjoyed it. I had thought this movie was loosely based on this book, but from what I remember about the book, the two don’t have anything remotely in common! I enjoyed it, nonetheless, and Tim said he did too, although I’m sure he would say this was his least favorite movie of the ones we got. The pace of this movie is slower, and it wants you to stop and think about your life and your job and your choices, and I really liked it. I thought it had a certain charm and a certain quality to it, that I really enjoyed. But, that’s just me, I love movies about appreciating the simple things in life.

So, there you go. We at least knocked 3 movies off our ever-growing list. We haven’t rented hardly any movies this year, and we’ve only been to the theater once. This is way behind schedule for us. I know it will pick up a lot more in the summer. Once our shows like 24, Idol, Lost, Survivor, etc go off for the summer sometime in May, we’ll start renting a lot more movies. I say every year that we want to try Netflix, but somehow, we never seem to get around to it. One reason could be the 100+ DVD’s we already own, and the massive amount of channels we get on our digital cable. Anyway, if you have any movies you’ve seen lately and would recommend, leave me a comment and let me know πŸ™‚ We still have a lot left to rent, and I’m always looking for more good ones to add to that list!

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Apr
16
Posted by Stace

Menu Plan Monday

Menu Planning Monday

I’m afraid there’s not too much original on the menu this week. Most of it is a roll-over from last week. We had some stuff come up and I didn’t get to make but 2 or 3 of the things on my menu from last week, so I’m going to push them on into this week. Isn’t that always the way things to go sometimes? πŸ™‚ Plus, we’re trying to do a little better (after splurging most of the weekend on pizza and take-out Chinese), so I’m putting salad on the menu for two nights in a row. Ack!

Thanks to Laura over at OrgJunkie for hosting this every week. Be sure to stop on over and check everyone’s menu!

Monday – Hamburgers, potato salad, veggie or side dish

Tuesday – Taco Salad

Wednesday – Grilled Chicken Salad

Thursday Shanna’s Cheesy Chicken & Tortellini, salad, maybe bread

Friday – Meatball subs and oven fries or TBD

Saturday – Date Night or TBD

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Apr
13
Posted by Stace

QOTD – Friday the 13th

Number 13Did you realize that today is Friday the 13th? Are you in any way superstitious? Do you have “paraskevidekatriaphobia” – fear of Friday the 13th? Or do you just have “triskaidekaphobia” – fear of the number 13?

I must admit, I am just the slightest bit superstitious. It comes to me naturally. My dad won’t go down a street if he sees a black cat cross the road. I’ve actually been in the car with him and had him turn around and go another way. And I can remember my grandmother saying things like “don’t open that umbrella inside, it’s bad luck”. And “be careful, don’t break that mirror or you’ll have seven years of bad luck”. So things like that, even though they are silly, I am mildly superstitious of. I don’t walk under ladders either πŸ™‚ I do, however, pick up pennies, no matter if they are heads up or down. And unlike Rachael Ray, I don’t throw salt over my shoulder for luck. πŸ˜†

I’ve always been interested in this kind of stuff. I was a mathematics major in college and I did a term paper one time on the number 13 and why people have trouble with it. It’s rooted in paganism and Christianity and numerology and a host of other “isms”. πŸ™‚ Friday, of course, was the day Christ was crucified and the number 13 stems from the number attending the Last Supper (Jesus plus the 12 apostles). I think most American hotels and office buildings don’t have a 13th floor. There’s a lot of these kinds of things, once you start thinking about them. Or looking them up πŸ™‚ You can Google like I often do, or go to Wikipedia and read more about it (click here for Friday the 13th info or click here for info on superstitions in general).

Anyway, there are a lot of things that some people are superstitious about. I thought it would make for a fun and maybe interesting “Question of the Day“. So, how about you? Do you consider yourself superstitious? Do you walk under ladders or open umbrellas indoors? Do you think if you break a mirror it will bring you bad luck? Would you stay in a hotel room on the 13th floor? Or anything else that someone else might consider a little superstitious? Leave me a comment and let me know!

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Apr
13
Posted by Stace

Friday Feast Meme

Friday Feast Meme

Feast One Hundred & Thirty Nine
April 13, 2007

Appetizer
When you were a child, which crayon color was your favorite?
When you were a child, what do you mean, “when you were a child“??? I still love crayons and I love to color! :mrgreen: I try to coerce my youngest niece and nephew into coloring with me any chance I get. I love to color! It drives them nuts, because I color within the lines. I am drawn to the bright colors – red and orange. Probably red would be my most favorite πŸ™‚

Soup
On a scale of 1 to 10 (with 10 being highest), how likely would you be to change jobs if it required you to move?
Probably a 1 or 2! We like where we live, and family is close by, so we don’t want to move away from all of our family

Salad
Take all the numbers in your birthday and your phone number and add them up, one by one. WhatÒ€ℒs the total?
60 (I think I did this right, not sure!) – that’s if you leave out the 19 out of 19xx for my birthday year. I also included my area code. Interesting question!

Main Course
Have you ever Ò€œre-giftedÒ€? anything? If so, what was it and who did you pass it on to?
No, I have never re-gifted in the truest sense of the word. I have passed along something I have gotten as a gift if it’s something I didn’t want or wouldn’t use, but I told the person it was something I received and wouldn’t use, did they want it? I never try to pass it off as another gift.

Dessert
Name something you need from the store.
MILK! Headed out in a little while for milk and orange juice and maybe a couple of other things. We drink a lot of milk around here πŸ™‚

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Apr
12
Posted by Stace

Mail Call

Yippee! Look what just came in the mail!!!!

Rachael Ray cookbook

For those of you who don’t remember, back in early January of this year, I shamelessly begged asked if anyone had any “cookbook points” from Nabisco brand boxes of crackers or cookies. So many of you were so sweet and so very generous, and you guys all pitched in and mailed me enough points to not only get a cookbook for myself, but to share with my sister Gail, so she could get one. And even though we had a bit of a scare back in March (when this little notify card came in, saying it would be a couple more months before it was shipped), I’m happy to say that the cookbook arrived today! Yeah! I can’t wait to start going through it πŸ™‚

Oh yes, and add it to my much beloved cookbook collection, which, as fate would have it, I just blogged about a couple of days ago, LOL! Believe it or not, this is my very first Rachael Ray cookbook. :mrgreen:

So, Thank You, Thank You, Thank You, to all of you who helped out — I really appreciate it! πŸ™‚

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