Skip to main content

Question of the Day (January 23, 2012)

I just got my new laptop and I'm working to set it up, so you'll notice I am probably going to stick with the same picture on this page for a while. haha I'm behind on a lot of comments and such because of my failing for the other laptop, so bear with me while I get everything set up and going again! And hopefully [crosses fingers] I'll even to manage a few minutes of playing Castleville as I told a friend I would. haha 


Answer here, or whatever service you're on. If I post this in a group, then I ask that you answer on my blog, or main profile wherever this is posted, not in the group.

More information on this can be found here and here.




Question of the Day:


What's the hardest thing you've ever done?




Today's 


 



will go to:
 
Jake's Take on Fishing. 


Jake's Take on Fishing.
He is new to the blogging scene and I want to give him exposure. 
So show him some love and pass the word around! :)


Also, to


Sarah Tyler, for writing a very important book on suicide. It's only $2.99 on Kindle and if you don't have the Kindle app, on her site, you can get it in booklet form for $4.99, just contact her at Suicide - A True Story. Her email address is below. 






Tootles!

Lots of warm hugs and love, free from me to you!

Comments

  1. I think the hardest thing I ever had to do was give up a friendship. Now that I look at it, I did the right thing. I need to do what's best for me even if that means hurting feelings (not intentionally though). I'm learning to let go more.

    --Diana Jillian

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Those sometimes can be the hardest things to do. But sometimes we must. Good for you.

      Thanks Diana!!

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Ladies and Gentlemen….

Normally, right about now, I would feel inclined to continue with “and children of all ages” (guess I’ve been to the circus just one time too many) but this time instead of introducing some dancing bears or the Flying Wallendas, I’m simply here to introduce myself. My name is Tracie Dee . I’ve been writing for about 4 years now and got my start blogging on MySpace. I love writing but these days, I’m also finding enjoyment with vlogging. I have found that videos are a nice way to share what words alone might not give justice to and also for people to really get to know the person behind the words and the keyboard. Overall, I consider myself to be a pretty down to earth and upbeat person, whose sense of humor can be a bit wacky at times. Hey, life can be rough and sometimes laughter and levity can be our only saving grace to help us get through it all. I consider it to be our very own little light at the end of the tunnel that serves to remind us that even during the very worst

Bucket Lists

"Its never too late to be what you might have been" – George Eliot I’ve been a late bloomer in pretty much every aspect of my life. Some of it was out of my control (I mean I really couldn’t help if Mother Nature has a twisted sense of humor and exercised it heavily on me during my teens and twenties) but I can’t put all of the blame for it on her, either. Some of it was also by my personal choice. And by that, I mean I used to be very shy and afraid of “what was out there” in the big, scary world so I would rarely try anything new or took any chances of any kind. I chose instead to do my best to hide away from life, tucking myself away from it safely like a tight little rosebud that had not yet bloomed. But there is a quote that says “And the time came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.” This was the case for me. As time went on, my rosebud shell grew more and more uncomfortable for me. So one day I just took a c

Silent relaxing sunday--wait it's Saturday. A day lost and found! :)

This week's   GBE   is about "Lost and Found." I know a lot of people some years back thought that I'd lost myself. I was even told it was the better part of myself. It took me years to figure out that it wasn't true. Somewhere in the back of my mind, I always believed it to be true. Until I finally had the courage to admit to myself, that they were in the wrong; not me.  That's the problem with some "friends." They aren't really your friends. Someone recently told me something that really hit home. It was profound even.  She said:  "The friend is not a friend. just a person with emotional gravity in your life."    Well that's true. Granted, the comment she had made was from a completely different happening, but still it works.  A lot of people are fortunate in having tons of close friends, even close friends that stick around their entire lifetime. I gave up on that notion a long time ago. I realized that mostly, friends w