3 years ago
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Raining in my Heart
awesomephotography.co
When I saw this wonderful photo, it reminded me of a song that I fell in love with as a teenager, working in Jackson Hole. The song "Raining in My Heart" was performed at one of the live theaters in town. Just a great memory.
George Haimsohn - Raining In My Heart
Pitter, patter what's the matter with me?
Pitter, patter rain is all that I see.
Where is my raincoat?
It's here somewhere.
Why wear a raincoat
The weather's fair.
But ever since I saw him depart
It's been raining, raining in my heart.
Where are my rubbers to ford the storm?
What good are rubbers outside its warm.
But ever since heaven fell apart
It's been raining, raining in my heart.
Once I saw a cottage on sunshine lane a fairy palace in disguise.
I don't see it now it must be rain that’s getting in my eyes.
Where’s my umbrella and where’s my guy.
I need my fella to keep me dry.
It won't help if the sunshine should start
‘cause it's raining in my heart.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
New Blog Location
Come check out my new Inspirational Snippets and Simple Treasures Blog, located at http://www.issimpletreasures.com/. We have lots of new fun ideas and posts, so hop on over. I'll see you there.
Labels:
Fun,
ideas,
posts,
simple,
simple treasures
Friday, February 15, 2013
Flowers for Winter
I am certainly enjoying these floral arrangements that I made to use at my nieces wedding reception. They are refreshing especially during these cold winter months. I love using silk flowers only if they look real. There are really some cheap looking silk flowers out there. I found these vases (which are actually candle stands, from Hobby Lobby). They are black wood carved and very elegant looking. I started with a piece of floral foam for each. Covered the foam with moss, and used a floral pick machine to add a pick to each flower, so that they would anchor into the foam real well. If you don't have a pick machine, you can add floral wire to the stems to give you either a longer stem or a more slender stem to go into the foam. Make sure to use the floral tape to tape over your wire, so that your wire looks like a stem. With the lily arrangement, I placed the lilies in first, the heads facing all directions, then added the mums all around to fill in to make a round shape. Design tip: Odd numbers of flowers seem to balance out an arrangement, that is why I used 5 lilies.
The silk marigolds I purchased originally to use within the flowers that I did for my nieces wedding. Try as I might, they didn't seem to look good mixed with the other flowers we were using. I love, love, love them all by themself in their own arrangement. I have gotten many comments on these arrangements.
After the flowers are placed into the foam. I just sit the foam on top of the candle stand. You really can't tell it is candlestand. It just looks like an elegant vase of flowers.
Take time to create with beautiful flowers, they will warm your heart and bring color to your life, especially during these sometimes, dismal winter days.
Marilyn
Labels:
candle stand,
floral arrangements,
flowers for winter,
lilies,
marigolds,
mums
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Simple Cure for Measuring Tools
I am loving my new solution for simplifying my measuring tool drama. It took courage to tap those tiny brass nails into my cabinets. But, really you can barely see them. The cups and spoons I found at Walmart for .88 cents. What a bargain. The cups have an indentation inside for other measurements. What I love, is there are just four each. When I use them, I instantly wash, dry and hang them. I don't have to dig through my drawer anymore to find the right measurement tool. Love it!
Happiness
Just came across this uplifting "Happiness Message" to send to my son serving an LDS Mission for our church. My goal is to send a Missionary Message weekly, so that he gets a letter each week in the mail. It is so easy to email our correspondence. But, something different for him to look forward to each week.
Happiness
“Happiness
is the object and design of our existence; and will be the end thereof, if we
pursue the path that leads to it; and this path is virtue, uprightness,
faithfulness, holiness, and keeping all the commandments of God” (Joseph Smith,
History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 5:134-35).
In this
beautiful statement, the Prophet says not only that happiness is the objective
in life, but he also explains how to go after it. Lehi in writing to Jacob said, “Men are, that
they might have joy” (2 Nephi 2;25). Later
in the same chapter, Lehi said, “The devil…seeketh that all men might be
miserable like unto himself” (2 Nephi 2:27).
The purpose of man, therefore, is happiness. God wants you to be happy; conversely, Satan
wants you to be unhappy.
President
David O. McKay said, “There are three means of achieving the happy, abundant
life: first, making God the center of
one’s life; second, using the free agency given to man; and third, rendering
service to others.” Each of these three
means is related to the path outlined by Joseph Smith:
1. Make God the center of your life. Joseph Smith said that you must keep
the commandments of God, that you must be holy, and that you must be
faithful. Richard Wagner said, “joy is
not in things, it is in us.” The Savior
said, “The kingdom of God is within you” (Luke 17:21). He also said, “For whosoever will save his
life shall lose it; and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it”
(Matthew 16:25).
2. Use the moral agency given to you. Happiness consists
in mastering evil tendencies. There cannot
be happiness without the freedom to choose.
If the spirit of man is in bondage or enslaved, there cannot be true
progress. You must find a way for your
spiritual self to control our physical self.
Sir James Barrie said, “The secret of happiness is not in doing what one
likes to do but in liking what one has
to do.” Joseph Smith said that you must
have virtue and uprightness. Horace Mann said, “In vain do they talk of
happiness who never subdued an impulse in obedience to principle. He who never sacrificed a present to a future
good, or a personal to a general one, can speak of happiness only as the blind
do of colors” (in Horace Mann; His Ideas
and Ideals, comp. Joy Elmer Morgan
[Washington, D.C.; National Home Library Foundation, 1936], 149; as cited in
Marvin J. Ashton, “Be of Good Cheer,”
Ensign, May 1986, 66).
3. Render service to others. Happiness only comes
to those who try to make others happy. Robert
Ingersoll said, “Happiness is the only good.
The place to be happy is here.
The time to be happy is now. The
way to be happy is to help make others so.”
Gretta Palmer said, “Happiness is a by-product of an effort to make someone
else happy.”
The great German
philosopher of the eighteenth century, Immanuel Kant, said that the great aims in
life must be the perfecting of yourself and the happiness of others. “Service is the rent we pay for the space we
occupy in the hearts of our fellow men” (in Eldred G. Smith, Conference Report,
April 1967, 77). President David O. McKay said, “He who seeks for happiness
alone seldom finds it, but he who lives to give happiness to others finds that
a double portion has come to himself” (David O. McKay, Pathways to Happiness, comp.
Llewelyn R. McKay [Salt Lake City; Bookcraft, 1957], 188).
Happiness is
not an external condition. It is a state
of the spirit and an attitude of the mind. (Raymond E. Beckham, How to Help Your Missionary, 150).
Happiness is
not an external condition. It is a state
of the spirit and an attitude of the mind.
This message was taken from the great book,How to Help Your Missionary, pg 149-150
by Raymond E. Beckham,
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