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Because we all need a good laugh
I never fail to be encouraged when I read the writings or cartoons of Todd Wilson. When I read his cartoons, I laugh so hard I cry. Literally. He has a gift for making homeschooling moms feel better when you're having one of those "everyone else teaches/cooks/cleans/etc. better than I do" moments (or days, or weeks, or maybe years).

On another note: Does it make you a bad mother if you tell your daughter that V8 Tropical Splash is mostly made of carrot juice in an attempt to scare her out of drinking it all?

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Schooling the Drama Queen
I've mentioned before what a drama queen my 7-year-old daughter is. On days when she is a little wired (like today), teaching her is a unique experience. Observe the following real conversations in our house this morning:

Drama Queen, proudly: Mommy I spelled purple-itioner!

When I looked at the dry erase board, it said "perpendicular."


10 year-old-daughter: Mommy, how many bones are in your foot? [I taught the kids' homeschool co-op human anatomy class in the fall.]

Me: I don't remember, honey; there are several.

Drama Queen: Your bladder!

Me: She asked how many bones are in your foot.

Drama Queen: Oh--I thought she said butt! Your bladder looks like a strawberry.

This conversation was wrong on so many levels I can't even begin to analyze it.



Anxious to finish schooling and get out into the fresh morning air, Drama Queen ran into the kitchen where I was teaching her brother.

Drama Queen: I finished phonics on the computer! I typed those letters and then the spaces and then the letters and then the spaces and then the letters.

Me: You mean sentences?

Drama Queen: Yeah--sentences!

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Let's Get Real Wednesday, er, I mean Monday
*Revised* - I forgot to add my blue eyeshadow picture!

I thought Randi's Let's Get Real Monday looked like a lot of fun, but I completely missed Monday. Here's the theme:
This week's Let's Get Real Monday theme is "The Outfit"! I know you have one! It is the one that you LOVE and everyone else hates. Or it may be the one that you previously loved and now you cringe at the thought of ever wearing it.
Randi posted lots of old pictures with clothing styles from different decades. I went in my basement looking for old pictures. I really need to organize them; my kids would love going through them. What I found was an old cheerleading picture from 9th grade, 1981. This definitely epitomizes "the outfit" for me during the early 80s. I was on drill team in 8th and 11th grades and cheerleading in 9th and 12th grades. With all those football and basketball games, I spent a lot of time in those uniforms.



Here are classic 80s pearls and lots of blue eyeshadow. This picture is 20 years old. I look like such a baby! I think this was from an overnight trip we took to the Queen Wilhelmina State Park Lodge. We were having a great time, but our family heard that it was going to snow, got scared, and called us to hurry home. Bummer! This was early married days; our oldest son was about 7 months old. I really loved the little Subaru we drove. It was sporty, with a sunroof--a far cry from the 15-passenger van I drive today!

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Woman to Woman: Enduring Health Problems

This week's Woman to Woman topic concerns dealing with health problems or illness. My life has been spent in the presence of two extremes: the extremely healthy and the extremely ill. The women in my family tend to be blessed with health and longevity. This picture below is of the "Golden Girls," my grandmother and two great-aunts. Aunt Thelma passed away almost four years ago at 96 years-of-age, Grandmother passed away last summer at 90, and Aunt Mayme is still going strong at 95. My dad will be 64 this year and is as handsome, charming, and youthful as ever (yes, I'm still a daddy's girl).

My mother, on the other hand, was always unhealthy, although the health problems that eventually led to her death at 57 did not have natural causes. My husband's family is plagued with diabetes and my husband was diagnosed at around 35-years-old. In spite of watching his diet and exercising, he started taking insulin last week. It all really worries me, but his doctor says that this is a really good type of insulin and the best way to handle things. She has been trying to get him to agree to it for a few months, but we've been hesitant. His readings have improved, which is a big relief to me.

I don't take my health for granted, but I seem to be following in the footsteps of many of the women in my family: I really don't feel any older than I did 20 years ago; I found childbirth in my late 30s no different than in my early 20s; I've never had a gray hair; I've had enough pregnancies and years of breastfeeding that I've greatly reduced the likelihood of many health conditions. Unfortunately, I realize that my mother sits squarely between me and those long-lived healthy women in my family. There's a part of me that's waiting for one of those big bad surprises that filled my mother's life. I'm praying for lots more years ahead with my hubby and all of the grandkids that we're likely to have!

Head over to Morning Glory's or Lei's place for more Woman to Woman posts!

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This Week's Bow Contest!
We're doing it again! Hop over to the Love-Me-Knots blog for two chances to win this week's featured bow!

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A Perfect Day for a Wedding
Yesterday my seven-year-old daughter and I attended three weddings. These were the only three weddings on our social calendar, and they all fell on the same day. The amazing thing is that we were able to attend all three. We left the house at 10:30 a.m.; when we left the third wedding it was 10 p.m. and we were 100 miles from home.

The first two couples are from church; even though we couldn't convince them that they really didn't want to get married the same day, they were kind enough to space them far enough that several of us attended both. Unfortunately, we had to leave before they cut the cake at the first wedding, so I made up for it by eating a piece of the bride's and the groom's cakes at the second wedding!

Katy and Chase are both homeschool graduates!

Ben planned a surprise honeymoon for Anna. At the reception, she still didn't know their destination, but I squeezed it out of him: Jamaica!

The third wedding was for Joanna and Brett. We've known Joanna for years, and she is also a homeschool graduate. Brett is in construction and built her a new home!


". . .Intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God."
~ Ruth 1:16
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Win a digital photo frame!

This week's contest at 5 Minutes for Mom is a giveaway for a 9" Philips Digital Photo Frame. I'm drooling. Head on over to 5 Minutes for Mom to sign up for your chance to win!

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May's Moments in Motherhood Topic
Moments in Motherhood is the writing project for mommy bloggers that I am hosting on the first Friday of each month. Here's the next topic for Friday, May 4, and can I say that I am dying to hear what y'all have to say on this subject:
What is your opinion concerning girls calling boys (I'm talking about our kids, not adults here)? Depending on the age of your children, did/do/will you let your daughters call boys? How do you feel about girls calling your son(s)?
This is a hot topic in the Dearest household at the moment! What do you think? Come back in two weeks, sign the Mr. Linky, and share your thoughts!

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Y'all don't forget...

to head over to the Love-Me-Knots blog for two chances to win our awesome ladybug bow!
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All in a day's work
Do you ever have one of those days when everything goes right, your kids do all their schoolwork brilliantly, your toddlers play quietly and clean up after themselves while the washer, dryer, and dishwasher hum efficiently in the background--in essence, your home operates like a well-oiled machine?

I didn't think so.

On the home front so far today (okay, so it was yesterday 'cause I didn't finish this until now):

I grade a paper where "wouln't" is listed as the contraction for "will not."

An algebra lesson develops into a conversation in which I try to enter the mind of a 16-year-old boy and said 16-year-old boy tries to enter the mind of a 41-year-old woman, all unsuccessfully. My mommy radar goes off, propelling me towards my bedroom, in which (in what can only be described as a fit of insanity) I have allowed the toddler set to hang and watch Clifford, supposedly allowing peace and quiet for the algebra lesson. Engrossed in the antics of The Big Red Dog, no one notices my 21-month old daughter has poured half a bottle of baby oil into the carpet.

After a frantic Google search for "removing baby oil from carpet"--which yields lots of suggestions for using baby oil to remove stains from other things but only two useful suggestions for removing baby oil--I pour copious amounts of baking soda and baby powder on the carpet and scrub it with a brush, then attack it with my handy steam cleaner.

When I emerge from my carpet-cleaning frenzy, I discover that the younger kids have taken advantage of me and are in the middle of the street, and my older son has gone to his room with no expectation of algebra lessons in the near future.

What to do? Cook. So I start slicing and dicing and fill the crock pot with chili, because I have to actually accomplish something today, right?

My 16-year-old son and I do eventually reconnect (actually he and my 7-year-old daughter chopped the onions for the chili, then held wet paper towels on their stinging eyes) with a pop quiz in Russian [Here I was actually quite pleased, because I am never clever enough to come up with things like pop quizzes. I have a Cyrillic font, but I can't imagine attempting to type with it, so I wrote on the dry erase board; then I wondered if I should take a picture of the quiz as the only way to record it. . . ?] and eventually we get to algebra. I'm thinking Mr. Demme would not have been particularly impressed with my teaching today, but at least we did it.

I guess I'll stop rambling. I'll bet you're feeling really good about your day now. Glad I could help.

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This Week's Carnival of Homeschooling
If there's one thing I learned during the Homeschool Blog Awards, it's that I'm not connected with enough homeschool bloggers. There were some categories where I wasn't familiar with any the other bloggers, and as one of my best friends likes to say, "That's ridiculous!" (You know who you are, my very expectant friend!) I can't wait to sit down with the list of nominees and winners and get my homeschooling batteries recharged. {sigh. . . pure bliss!}

I was contacted today about linking to this week's Carnival of Homeschooling. I was thoroughly entertained just reading the assorted quotes on income taxes, which were interspersed among the links to participating blogs.

A non-blogging fellow homeschooler told me today that she read my blog this week and sensed that blogging could fill a need for homeschoolers--not only a connection with others but an opportunity to share information and ideas. I hope to do more of that in the future. Stop by this week's Carnival of Homeschooling to see what others have to say about topics ranging from supporting your support group leaders to starting a garden and building a unit study around it.

Blessed schooling!

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Our first contest!
Those of you who have been reading this blog for any length of time have heard about the website I'm designing for my friend, Melissa, bow-maker extraordinaire. I want to introduce you to the Love-Me-Knots blog which we will use for contests, coupon codes, introducing new products, and web updates.

Since we're getting closer to opening the website for business, we want to kick things off with our first contest! Click on over for not one, but two chances to win the fabulous bow pictured here.

Please spread the word!

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Every mom needs one of these!
Susan and Janice at 5 Minutes for Mom are giving away a Sick Bear in this week's giveaway. This cute little bowl is for your child to hold when they, well you know, get sick. Comforting for child, less mess for mommy. What a clever product!

Stop by and enter for your chance to win!

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My sincere thanks...
to everyone who voted for My Home Sweet Home for Best Blog Design in the Homeschool Blog Awards. The results were released today, and this site won! The prize awarders are listed on the site, and it looks like a great bunch of companies. Many thanks to them and the ladies whose hard work put together these awards.

As many of you may have heard, one of the organizers, Heather at Especially Heather, was diagnosed with a brain tumor this week. Please keep her in your prayers and stop by BooMama's site on Wednesday to help raise funds for Heather's trip to the Mayo Clinic later this month. Donations are through PayPal and start at $1.

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The Dream
Have you ever had that dream, the one where you're back in school and get to class, only to discover that there's a test that day? The trouble is, you didn't know there was a test and you're completely unprepared. I've had it off and on for several years. My mother used to tell me that she still had that dream, and she'd been out of school much longer than I had.

One evening two or three years ago I was driving down the road listening to a radio program called the Dream Doctor. I haven't heard it quite some time, but it was an interesting program and the host played some fun music. I enjoy listening to Delilah's listener calls, but sometimes I just say, "Enough! I can't listen to another sappy Disney movie theme song!" [I just did a search and discovered that the Dream Doctor is no longer on the air because its host is now suffering from Lou Gehrig's Disease; his words began to slur and he will eventually lose the ability to speak. Sadly, he is only 44 years old.]

On this particular evening, a retired teacher called. She often had this dream, but often from a different perspective: sometimes she was a student unprepared to take the test; sometimes a teacher unprepared to give the test. She explained that she really didn't have any school hang-ups--unresolved testing issues, if you will--but still the dream persisted over the years. Cut to commercial. . .

Let me tell you, I was hanging on the edge of my seat. Alone in my car, I almost turned off my cell phone. I needed to hear his opinion about this dream and I was paranoid something was going to happen to prohibit it. If you've had this dream, maybe you're hanging on the edge of your seat now, too.

You know what he had to say? In his opinion (which obviously is the best anyone can give; I don't know any modern-day Josephs), the dream had nothing to do with school. The test was the key. Dreaming this dream can symbolize some sort of test in your life, a challenge or hurdle which you're facing and for which you feel unprepared. Amazingly, this interpretation has been valid every time I've had the dream since hearing the program. The next time I experienced it was the week of Thanksgiving. It was the first time I was hosting this holiday for my extended family, and I was nervous about being the one cooking the turkey. What's Thanksgiving with a ruined turkey?! You can understand my apprehension. And I understood my dream.

Have you had this recurring dream? The next time you do, think about what's going on in your life and see if you're being tested!

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A Call to Prayer
I got up this morning thinking about the Homeschool Blog Awards and the health situation of one of its organizers, Heather at Especially Heather (she also designs for Swank Web Style). Heather found out this week that she has a brain tumor. She has an appointment on the 25th at the Mayo Clinic; apparently it usually takes 6-8 months to get an appointment like this.

BooMama is organizing a fundraiser to help offset the cost of the trip and medical expenses on April 18. Almost $10,000 was raised for Kelli earlier this year. Please pray for Heather, her family, and her doctors, and don't forget to stop by BooMama's next Wednesday. Donations are through PayPal, with a minimum donation of $1.00.

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About My Design
Voting began yesterday for the Homeschool Blog Awards, and some of you may be visiting here while checking out the nominees. This little corner of the blogosphere, My Home Sweet Home, was nominated for Best Blog Design.

Last summer I read a post describing how to fiddle with your template and add a custom header; I was hooked. In September I purchased two books - one on Photoshop and one on Dreamweaver - and began learning and experimenting in earnest. This is my fifth template and represents an effort to create a non-seasonal, long-term design. I think my "diary girl" represents me fairly well: the same flippy hair-do (although hers is much nicer than mine); the blue eyes (I changed hers from brown based on a friend's recommendation). She's even got St. Basil's Cathedral in one of her pictures, which is appropriate since I was a Russian major in college!

Now for a little shameless self-promotion:
To vote for this blog in the Best Blog Design category, visit this page and click the circle next to My Home Sweet Home (bottom half of the list) then be sure to hit the "Vote" button at the bottom of the list or your selection won't count. For voting in all categories, go here and select each category to see the list of nominees.

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Moments in Motherhood, April, 2007
This is my first attempt at hosting Moments in Motherhood, a writing project for bloggers. The day after I posted the topic, I looked at it and thought, "This was for me, wasn't it?" I really feel the need to explore my own thoughts on this. Please share yours, too. A Mr. Linky is at the bottom of this post.

This month's topic is:
Was birth an empowering experience for you? Do you agree with the statement "you birth the way you live"? Did your birth experience(s) impact you in a long-term way?
I have a friend who gets squeamish at the sight of blood. Recently she told me about coming upon an accident victim. While driving down the road, her daughter looked out the window at small, country church and something caught her eye. A woman on a motorcycle had lost control, skidded off the road and across the church yard, and eventually slid under an outdoor picnic table. Her leg was broken in multiple places and she was bleeding.

My friend helped the woman remove her helmet, comforted her, and stayed with her until help arrived. To say that the situation took my friend outside of her comfort zone is an understatement, but she did what she had to do and what the situation required of her. After hearing her story, I told her, "This reminds me of birth. You have to dig down deep and do something you didn't know you were capable of doing."



When I was twenty years old and expecting my first child, I discovered that my fear of medication was greater than my fear of pain. I'd spent my life watching my mother undergo endless surgeries and health problems, dependent on pain medication, and I didn't want anything to do with it. The only time I vomited during that pregnancy was in the middle of the childbirth education class on anesthesia. When the discussion turned to needles and deadening things, I broke out in a cold sweat. I didn't even make it to the hospital bathroom; I got sick in the middle of the hall.

I studied for childbirth like an upcoming exam, and I wanted to ace it. My unmedicated delivery was one of the most wondrous experiences of my life, and yes, I felt empowered by it, fulfilled in a never-before imagined way. My second delivery at twenty-five years old was much the same. Later I remarked to my husband that I would love to give birth once a year, as a kind of "fix." It wasn't the desire for another child each year, just giving birth; the experience was that intense for me.

My next four deliveries involved three inductions, and honestly there wasn't a valid reason for any of them. What they did was infuse that magical experience with an element of fear. Fear of the nurse walking in the door every half-hour to increase the pitocin, since it takes me so long to react to it. Fear of the tidal wave-force labor that hits when that reaction finally occurs. Fear that I wouldn't be able to handle it unmedicated anymore.

With my seventh pregnancy, my instructions to my husband were this: No matter how huge/swollen/miserable I become (for I knew what the future held) remind me that I do not want to be induced. Period. Four days before my due date I was 5cm dilated, thanks in part to some fabulous advice from a friend who is a homebirth midwife (sorry, it's too graphic to print here). My OB's office said I could show up at the hospital any time and be admitted, but I refused. I went to the hospital the day before my due date with potential complications; although an assessment showed all was well, I was encouraged to just stay and they could "start me up." We went home.

I went into labor on my own the next day. We were at the hospital for two and a half hours before the baby was born. The first hour and a half was spent watching the end of a Braves' game and two episodes of Seinfeld, where I only contracted when I laughed. I'd broken the induction cycle and it was great, much better. The problem was that the fear had stayed with me from those inductions. If there's one thing I know about childbirth, fear is your worst enemy. When I started to panic a bit during that one hour of serious labor and questioned my ability to handle it, my nurse completely dismissed my concerns. What she basically said was, "Six prior labors, no epidural. Honey, you don't need it! Is there anything else I can do for you?" I didn't realize just how much that conversation and her dismissal of my concerns affected me until my eighth pregnancy...

I allowed my midwife to schedule an induction two weeks in advance for two weeks before my due date since her office was short-staffed, the hospital was booked solid with inductions, and that was the only sure chance of her attending the birth. [It bears mentioning that at that fabulous seventh birth, my practice wasn't on call and I had a doctor who basically walked in the door, put on some gloves, and caught the baby. I'd never laid eyes on him before or since.] A sinus infection hit me the week before my induction and I was given a five-day, strong round of antibiotics.

Reality began to sink in: I couldn't breathe and had a nasty cough; I would be stuck in bed with an IV; my mother wouldn't be there (she had always been there for me, but passed away when my seventh child was six-months-old; for months I feared that I would break down immediately following this birth); nurses don't take me seriously if I express an interest in pain medication. I was a little jealous of all the pain-free birth stories I'd heard over the years. The decision was made--I'd get an epidural! I deserved it, didn't I? I had birthed seven other children without it and didn't have anything to prove to myself, right? Wrong. Dead wrong.

See, for me (and I realize it is a very subjective experience) birth is empowering. I do "birth the way I live." I won't even take something for a headache, unless it's really bad. 2 Timothy 1:7 -- "For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind" is very much a life-verse for me.

I was so consumed by fear that I requested an epidural before I even needed it; it was given to me because my midwife had told them to take me seriously if I asked for it. I got sick (vomiting) from the anesthesia, and it caused such uncontrollable shaking that my jaws ached the next day. The labor took over twelve hours and was filled with unnecessary medical interventions. I didn't feel like I gave birth; I didn't feel much of anything--I was numb.

In spite of my conviction about the accuracy of my dates, my due date had been moved up by nine days. After the birth, my midwife said that based on Lily's appearance, my original due date was correct. My labor took forever because my baby and my body just weren't ready. Something happened during the delivery that later caused Lily months of physical therapy (she's fine now). If I had not allowed the induction and had just let my daughter come in her own good time, my sinus infection would have had a chance to clear; we both would have been ready. I think things would have been different.

As you may have guessed I have had trouble dealing with this birth, processing it if you will. I would say that yes, my birth experiences affect me long-term. That I was unable to trust myself and my body--which is ultimately trusting God, since I know He's the one who strengthens and sustains me--is something I have to live with. With God's grace I hope that tackling this head-on, working it out in print, will enable me to let it go and leave it behind me.

I don't expect everyone's perspective on birth to be the same as mine. It is a deeply personal experience. Please share your thoughts on this topic and link to your exact Moments in Motherhood post, not just your blog address, in the Mr. Linky below. Thank you for listening and/or participating!

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Presto!
Susan and Janice at 5 Minutes for Mom are at it again! This time they're giving away a Presto. What's a Presto?
a cool new service that delivers emails, photos and other content to people who don’t use a computer. So you can send emails and photos to Grandma and they just automatically print out on her HP Presto printer – the HP Printing Mailbox (there's a monthly service fee of $10).
Sign their Mr. Linky by 1 p.m. Monday for your chance to win!

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I think, therefore I blog
I discovered that Randi at "i have to say..." gave me a "thinking blogger" award. I would love to say something clever and thought-provoking, but nothing comes to mind, so let me just say "Thank you, Randi. I'm touched."

I looked up the history of this award, originally called "5 Blogs That Make Me Think." The participation rules are simple:
1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think.
2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme.
3. Optional: Proudly display the 'Thinking Blogger Award' with a link to the post that you wrote.
There are two buttons, gold or silver:




I award:
Queen Shenaynay at The Beehive. She is my long-distance (Texas) cousin, from my mother's father's side of the family, many of whom are known as great characters thinkers. Her posts range from silly to sublime, but they always make me think. The Beehive is a family blog effort, including Queen Shenaynay's husband and two daughters.

Elle at A Complete Thought. Elle is one of the most thought-provoking bloggers I know. I usually have Bible Gateway pulled up on another tab while leaving comments on her posts. Our initial bond was our shared love appreciation for Jack Bauer.

Melanie at This Ain't New York. Melanie is an observer and commentator on all, from the mundane to the eccentric. You've never seen a prouder mama. She's also completely. certifiably. insane, which makes her a whole lot of fun.

Amber at Life with the Ferrells. Amber makes me think of what life would be like as a wickedly funny, 20-something mommy with a camera in one hand and a toddler in the other. Her digital scrapbooking layouts and photos of her kids are amazing.

Antique Mommy. If you've never read Antique Mommy, you're missing some of the best mommy blogging around. She has the ability to examine the unique facets of motherhood in a profound and insightful way. She makes me think about what it means to be a mommy.

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Here Ya Go, Baby!
I have a 21-month-old daughter, Lily Rose, who has me wrapped around her little finger. Lily has the limited vocabulary of a child her age. For a while she's been saying "here ya go" when she hands me something. Usually what she's handing me is something I wish she didn't have in the first place, like dog food. Or the kitchen towel. Or someone's toothbrush.

Yesterday, she handed me something off the floor and said, "Here ya go, baby." I immediately dropped it, hoping. I only got a "here ya go" the second time, but she said the whole phrase to me again this morning. Just as quiet Westley wooed Buttercup with a simple "As you wish," I am completely and utterly charmed by this simple four-word phrase and the child that speaks it to me.
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Happenings in the blogosphere:
Does your vacuum cleaner suck? Or more importantly does it not suck? (Carol, I'm doing this for you, and since I'm discussing vacuum cleaners, I think I can get away with it.) The gals at at 5 Minutes for Mom are having a contest to give away a Dyson vacuum cleaner. Woo hoo! Hurry over and sign-up to win. Entries are due by 1:00 p.m. Wednesday.

Also, 5 Minutes for Mom is hosting a new series called "About Blogging" on the first Mondays of the month and are they looking for guest contributors. Topics will include:
  • What is Page Rank and How Do I Get It?
  • All About Carnivals and Memes
  • How To Embed Video, Music and Slideshows
  • SEO – The Basics
  • The HTML You Need to Know


Here are a couple of reminders (just click the buttons):

(Y'all please don't leave me with a lonely Mr. Linky, hint, hint!)

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Full Circle
I set up a blog on homeschoolblogger.com in the fall of 2005, but I just didn't "get it"--blogging I mean. I wrote a couple of self-conscious posts, didn't go out and meet anyone, didn't get any comments.

A few months later an issue of The Old Schoolhouse magazine arrived in my mailbox. It featured an article about the Homeschool Blog Awards. Blog awards? I'd never imagined such a thing! I promptly sat down with my magazine in hand and began checking out the award winners--fantastic stuff! I got it this time--blogging that is--and I set up a blogger blog after finding out some friends had just started blogs here. That article about the Homeschool Blog Award winners was what ultimately lured me into starting this blog last May. I was tickled pink yesterday when I saw I had a nomination for Best Blog Design on this year's awards.

Nominations are going on until Friday (April 6) at midnight. Go make a homeschool mommy blogger happy and submit a nomination!

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