Me From A to Z:
Amateur Parodist,
Blogger,
Christian,
David Davidovich,
Evangelical Sans Trump Kool-Aid,
Father of 3 Adult Children,
Giraffe lover,
Husband of One Amazing Wife,
Iguchi Appreciator,
Jester,
Kindegarten Clear,
Library Lover
Muppet Man
Narnian
Optimist
Poet
Quintessential Worker
RITA (Republican In Theory, Anyways.)
Stonehill Fan
Teacher
U of I Parent - ILL,
Voracious reader,
White Sox Fan,
Xenophile
Yankovic Enthusiast
Zoo Afficionado
Sox Fam
A Quote to Start Things Off
We cannot seem to escape paradox: I do not think I want to. Madeline L’Engle Walking on Water
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other A to Z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 20 more times this month.
Film: 42
Director: Brian Helgeland
I grew up loving baseball. I didn't think much of it. Baseball was always there. I could watch it on t.v. I could play it with my friends and I could dream about being my favorite players Dick Allen or Hank Aaron.
These players were black and I was white. At that time I had never met a black person, but that didn't bother me. My heroes were great baseball players and I wanted to be like them. That I could do that is a tribute to Branch Rickey, the general manager who helped integrate baseball and to Jackie Robinson who was the first black player in the modern era of baseball.
Positive Tomato: Well-paced and often riveting, and manages to inspire while remaining true to sport and to the player who changed it and all of the professional sport forever. Bruce DeMara - Toronto Star
Negative Tomato: 42 is a hackneyed, cookie-cutter film that manages to tell us absolutely nothing about a turning point in American history. AP Kryza - Willamette Week
Chadwick Boseman shines as Robinson. He gives us a glimpse of how difficult it is to be the first.
Harrison Ford transforms himself into Branch Rickey.
Resiliency: When Rickey tells Robinson his plan to have him be the first black player in baseball, they have this exchange...
Robinson: You want a player who doesn't have the guts to fight back?
Rickey: No. No. I want a player who has the guts not to fight back.
This resiliency to take the verbal abuse, the discrimination, to receive the hate mail and death threats is shown scene after scene.
Top 100: Regardless of whether it makes my top 100 (I imagine it will) it will always be my top 42.
A to Z Connections: This is the 3rd sports film (Breaking Away and Chariots of Fire) and the second film with Harrison Ford (The Empire Strikes Back).
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 21 more times this month.
Positive Tomato: The Empire Strikes Back displays the same soaring imagination that made Star Wars a filmmaking classic; most other space movies seem clunky and earthbound in comparison. Bob Thomas - Associated Press
By Bogaerts, Rob / Anefo - [1] Dutch National Archives, The Hague, Fotocollectie Algemeen Nederlands Persbureau (ANeFo), 1945-1989, Nummer toegang 2.24.01.05 Bestanddeelnummer 931-2164, CC BY-SA 3.0 nl, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=27409421
Negative Tomato: A Stars Wars that has not only lost much of its humor and charm but more important a good deal of its innocence, traveling in the process light years away from the shiny magnitude of its original world Joy Gould Boyum - Wall Street Journal
If you look closely you can see the Millenium Falcon avoiding being eaten.
Star Wars Episode 5 is in my opinion the best sequel ever made. How do you follow up on a film that revolutionizes the movie industry? By continuing to revolutionize.
Resiliency: The empire is very resilient when it comes to replacing admirals.
Top 100: This movie is definitely in my top 100. The question for me becomes do I put it before or after te original Star Wars. I think what I did with my original 100 was place them back to back which makes the order less consequential. I enjoy watching Empir more than I watch New Hope, but as I explained to someone at C2E2 (A midwest Comicon-like event) I would rank Star Wars just a little higher than Empire since Star Wars paved the way for it. When I make my official top 100 later this year we will see if I have the courage of my convictions.
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 22 more times this month.
Film: Dave (1993)
Director: Ivan Reittman
Presidential movies were all the rage in the 1990s. (The American President, Air Force One, JFK, Nixon, Absolute Power). In this one, a presidential body double makes the most of what was supposed to be a temporary job.
Dave (Official Traier)
Positive Tomato: A genial, expertly played political comedy proves that the spirit of Mr. Smith still lives. Richard Schickel - Time Magazine
Negative Tomato: As Kline begins to take his presidential duties seriously, the comedy seeps out, a listless civic-mindedness drifts in like the fog off the Potomac. Leah Rozen - People Magazine
If you've never seen this film. the 30th anniversary is a good time to jump on board. This may be Kevin Klines best film and with a resume filled with hits gems like Cry Freedom and Silverado that is certainly saying something. Charles Grodin is in only a few scenes but does a great job of showing the uniqueness of a guy like Dave.
Resiliency: The balancing the budget subplot of Dave is a great snapshot in Resiliency.
In the film, Dave visits a homeless shelter with the President's wife. When the homeless shelters are stripped of funding, Dave is told by the President's draconian chief of staff (played ever so malevolently by Frank Langella) that he can keep the shelters by adding 650 million dollars to the budget.
In the next few scenes, Dave attempts to do just that and even brings his accountant, the aforementioned Grodin, to help him with the gargantuan task.
To watch this scene and read more about its resiliency factor click here.
Top 100: One of my criteria for top 100 films lies in its rewatchability. I remember enjoying this movie increasingly upon every viewing. For that reason alone, I cannot imagine a Top 100 film list of mine with Dave, not on it.
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 23 more times this month.
I found out recently that the Chariots of Fire orchid is a hybrid. The film Chariots of Fire is a hybrid of sorts as well. Part biography, part sports movie. It is also not one but two bio-pics grown together. Eric Liddle and Harold Abrahams. They may be competitors under the same flag in the Olympics, but I do not feel they needed to compete for screen time. Each character's story was given enough time to blossom.
Liddle is a man called by God whose Olympic ambitions and his dedication to God's plans are sometimes running in opposition. Abrahams is the son of a Lithuanian Jew who runs to overcome the prejudice of post-WWI Britain.
Positive Tomato: This is a beautiful, unhurried film that unfolds a vision of the past that reminds us there once existed a time of innocence and tradition. Dann Gire - Daily Herald
Negative Tomato: Cross and Charleson are capable leads, which makes the screenwriter's refusal to focus their characters all the more aggravating.Michael Maza - Arizona Republic
Resiliency: There are many excellent moments of resiliency in this film. I have decided to show you one and tell you about another.
The first one takes place in the movie at a meet where Harold Abrahams sees Eric Little run for the first time.
The second resiliency moment I'd like to document happens in the aftermath of a race where Little has just beaten Abrahams.
After the race, Abrahams is disappointed and is sitting in the stands unable to be consoled by his girlfriend. He finally says to her, If I can't win, I won't race. She replies back, If you won't race, you can't win.
I love the symmetry of that moment and how it ties into what Abrahams witnessed Little do in the previous scene. He got up and finished the race.
Top 100: Chariots of Fire is one of my top 5 favorite movies of all time. In 2011 when I posted my top 10 here it was in 5th place. In 2017 when I made my top 100 list it had moved past Casablanca into 4th place. When I finish revising the list later this year (hopefully) It should still be 4th or 5th.
A to Z Connections: This is the second sports movie on the list so far. The first one of course was yesterday's Breaking Away. The star of Breaking Away, Dennis Christopher portrays an American Olympic runner in Chariots of Fire.
Picture and Quote:
I believe God made me for a purpose, for China,but he
also made me fast. And when I run, I feel his pleasure.
For more of the letter C in the A to Z challenge, click here.
I will be posting a special A to Z Chariots of Fire theme Easter Egg a little bit later in the day.
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 24 more times this month.
Breaking Away is a coming-of-age sports movie about four friends from Bloomington, Indiana. The movie features Dennis Christopher, Daniel Stern, Dennis Quaid, and Jackie Earle Hailey. Dennis Quaid and Daniel Stern are probably the most famous of the 4 now, but at the time I only recognized Jackie Earle Hailey from the Bad News Bears films.
The movie takes place in the late '70s in Bloomington, Indiana, a college town in the midwest. Christopher plays the main character Dave Stoller. The movie takes place in the year after Stoller and his 3 friends graduate from high school and are spending their gap year hanging around together when Stoller isn't cycling around Indiana or tormenting his father by cosplaying an Italian cyclist.
The movie does a great job of confronting the divides between social classes and generations. It has humor, introspection, romance, and intrigue while being true to its David vs. Goliath roots. The American Film Institute (AFI) has placed on two of its lists of top 100 films. In 2006 it was named #8 on the list of most inspirational movies. In 2008 The AFI named it 8th on their list of sports moves.
( Left To Right ) Christopher, Hailey, Stern, Quaid
(Photo by John Springer Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)
This is both a well-written and well-acted movie as this monologue by Dennis Quaid will attest.
Negative Tomato: This timeworn material probably should work, but it doesn't really since, most of the film's angst and conflict seem calculated. Jeremy Heilman - MovieMartyr.com
The movie was filmed entirely in Bloomington, Indiana. If you are interested this video goes back and shows some of the main places where it was filmed.
Resiliency: Resiliency is sometimes pre-meditated as near the end of the movie when Dave and his friends tape Dave's feet to the bike pedals so as the commentators observe they can no longer switch riders for the duration of the race. That scene is a visual reminder to me of the end of Hebrews 12:1 , "And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us."
Top 100: When I last made my top 100 list, I wasn't really sure what to do with Breaking Away. I loved it when it first came out but when I saw it last 20 years ago or so I remember thinking it hadn't aged well. I watched it again earlier this year and it really resonated with me again. It would definitely make my top 100 this time out and wouldn't be surprised at all if it broke into the top 50.
How do I spend my off day on the a to z challenge? By releasing 2 non a-z related posts. It is time for the first official last 4 next 10 of the year.
LAST FIVE
The Annotated Pride & Prejudice
Jane Austen
Annotated and Edited by David M. Shapard
Borrowed from libray.
Read to myself
.
Read myself borrowed from library.
The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club
Dorothy L. Sayers
Borrowed from Hoopla read from Ipad.
Pure Drivel
Steve Martin
Borrowed from Hoopls listened to on phone
Strong Poison
Dorothy L. Sayers
Borrowed from Hoopla listened to on phone
An Old Fashioned Girl
Louisa May Alcott
Family Owned
Read to myself
NEXT TEN
The Last Juror- John Grisham
The Last Sweet Mile - Allen Levi
Write Better - Andrew T. Le Peau
Gentle and Lowly - Dane Ortlund
Luke - The Gospel of Amazement - Michael Card
What To Do on Thursday - Jay E. Adams.
75 Readings - An Anthology
Heroes of the Faith - Gene Fedele
The Five Red Herrings - Dorothy L. Sayers
Alone - Megan E. Freeman
Concise Theology - J.I. Packer
On The 40th day of the year I had read 8 books. 52 days later I have finished 5 more. So with 1/4 of the year finished I have finished 13 books. In 52 days I have gone from a projected 74 books at years end to a projected 51.57. With the Challenge this month I may not finish a lot of books and my projections may continue to plummet, but hopefully I'll get back into the swing after the challenge.
I am taking a scheduled rest from posting on the A to Z challenge today. I have been posting my monthly stats the first day of the new month, but since yesterday was the first day of the challenge. and I knew I'd have a respite today, I decided to wait until today for the stats post. I posted on my blog 8 times last month. I had posted 9 each in January and February, so my average for the year has been pretty much the same. At this rate I should have 104 posts by the end of the year.
My average posts per month for the past quarter have been 8.63 rounding up to 9. Over the past 18 months I have posted 167 times for an average of 9.28 posts per month. If you take away my most prolific month (April 2022 - 28 posts) and my most abysmal (November 2021 - 1 post) my average goes fown to 8.63 post per month which is nearly identical to my output this quarter.
With my A to Z post yesterday this is the 30th month in a row that I have posted at least once on this blog.
I should be back later today with a second post regarding my last 5 books read since I was up past midnight finishing An Old Fashioned Girl. I have some work to do on the challenge as well today and make sure my next few posts are ready for publication.
Hello and welcome to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to. I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 25 more times this month.
Film: Arsenic and Old Lace (1944)
Director: Frank Capra
By Photographer not credited - <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://archive.org/stream/cinemundial28unse#page/156/mode/1up">Cine Mundial, April 1943</a>, Public Domain, Link
Arsenic and Old Lace premiered on September 23rd, 1944. This was exactly 20 years before I premiered. It's a funny story actually, my Dad and my 9 months pregnant Mom were at an Arsenic and Old Lace 20th anniversary party when ... No, Just kidding.
Cary Grant stars in this dark comedy/ screwball comedy that was the first Frank Capra film I ever watched. The basic gist of the film is that Mortimer Brewster (played by Grant) is a theatre critic and avowed bachelor who at the beginning of the film marries the girl next door to his boyhood home in Brooklyn.
"The Fun" begins when Grant discovers his beloved salt of the earth aunts are actually serial murderers and is then also reunited with a few other of his sanity-challenged relatives.
Positive Tomato: It's not mere hyperbole to state that Frank Capra's Arsenic and Old Lace ranks as one of the funniest films ever made.Matt Brunson - Film Frenzy
Negative Tomato: Not one of Capra's best. Grant is too hammy and out of control, and without Boris Karloff as Jonathan Brewster, the joke is lost.Bob Bloom - Journal and Courier (Lafayette, Indiana)
I really enjoyed this movie watching it on T.V. as a kid. In recent viewing, I found it a little long and a little uneven but still enjoyed it and would probably watch it again, especially with folks who have not seen it before.
Resiliency: Mortimer Brewster shows a lot of resiliency throughout the film trying to figure out how to best deal with his family situation since he literally knows where the bodies are buried.
Top 100: I don't think this will make my top 100 list. I'm a Big Frank Capra fan and while it's not one of my favorite Capra films, I do think that maybe it would make its way onto the bottom 100 of my top 200 film list.
Over the past few weeks I've posted about my A to Z Theme reveal for the upcoming A to Z challenge and I've posted a little about blogs that appear on my various blogrolls on my home page. I'd like to combine those today and tell you about blogs I have on my blogrolls that are participating in this year's challenge and tell you about their themes.
One of my favorite blogs is Sue's Trifles. Her theme this year is revisiting her theme from 2013 where she combined alliteration with content to help people learn more about Christ and Christianity. I am really looking forward to her posts this year.
When Sue isn't doing the A to Z challenge she mostly posts book reviews which is why Sue's Trifles can be found in my Writing, Poetry, Publishing, and Book blogs blogroll.
The next blog has recently moved from my Bloggy Blogs (more on that soon) blogroll to my Writing, Poetry, Publishing and Book Blogs blogroll where it fits the category much better. hdhstory.net is using the theme of an adventure at the Kingdom of Selat. I am looking forward to the "tales" that will be found there.
Janet's Smiles is another blog I follow. Her theme this year is the Illuminate SF - Festival of Light. I have Janet's Smiles in my Bloggy Blogs blogroll. A bloggy blog is a blog that kind of sprays to all fields.
I got the inspiration for the title bloggy blogs from a friend of my son when they were in high school together. She and her family attend a local megachurch which doesn't really look like a church at all. I was driving my son and his friends to an outing and we passed a local church that looked like your typical steeple and triangular roof church. She wasn't looking at it at first and then when she saw it, she said "Look! A churchy church."
John Holton who is a member of the A to Z team hosts a blog called TheSound of One Hand Typing. He can also be found on my Bloggy Blogs blogroll. His theme this year is really jazzy. It makes my heart jingle and my mouth ajar in contemplation. He is going to juxtapose the letter j in each of the 26 words he's choosing for the challenge. Well, that's what he said, hopefully, he didn't perjure himself.
The 5th and (so far) final of my blogroll blogs participating in the challenge this year is Wolf of Words. This is the 4th time the wolf is using the theme of fan fiction. I am especially looking forward to the Scooby Doo/Dr. Who Mash-up.
On this Day March 12th, 1951 fellow baby boomer and my favorite singer Randy Stonehill was born in California. He turns 71 today and to celebrate I will link 71 of my favorite songs (and yes, I have that many) of his here on this very happy birthday post. Many of these songs can be found on Spotify. All of these songs are available for purchase at Bandcamp. Note: Songs are listed from the album they originally appeared. The song is not always being played from that album.
1. Never Can Repay - Born Twice
2. Faithful - Until We Have Wings
3. Get Me Out of Hollywood- Get me Out of Hollywood
4. Starlings - Return To Paradise
5. Christmas Song For All Year 'Round - Welcome To Paradise
6. I Love You - Born Twice
7. Norman's Kitchen - Born Twice
8. Bad Fruit -The Sky Is Falling
9. Still Small Voice - Celebrate This Heartbeat
10. Christine - Between The Glory And The Flame
11. Can Hell Burn Hot Enough - Until We Have Wings
12. Light Of The World - Equator
13. First Prayer - Welcome To Paradise
14. Keep Me Runnin' - Welcome To Paradise
15. Stop The World - Celebrate This Heartbeat
16. Sunday's Child - Mystery Highway
17. Love Beyond Reason - Love Beyond Reason
18. Ramada Inn (Live) - Until We Have Wings
19. Everything But Love - Stonehill
20. Didn't It Rain - Until We Have Wings
21. One True Love - The Sky Is Falling
22. Until Your Love Broke Through- Love Beyond Reason
23. Celebrate This Heartbeat - Celebrate This Heartbeat
24. The Hope of Glory - The Wild Frontier
25. Modern Myth - Celebrate This Heartbeat
26. Can't Buy A Miracle - Can't Buy A Miracle
27. Leonard Has A Toaster - Lost Art Of Listening
28. Glory And The Flame - Between The Glory And The Flame
29. Stand Like Steel - Return To Paradise
30. Hand of God - Thirst
31. Barbie Nation - Wonderama
32. Old Clothes - Until We Have Wings
33. Charlie The Weatherman - Stories
34. Try Havin' Some Faith - Spirit Walk
35. Turning Thirty - Equator
36. Lazarus Heart - Lazarus Heart
37. This Old Face - Lost Art Of Listening
38. Baby Hates Clowns - Thirst
39. Strong Hand Of Love - Welcome To Paradise
40. Curious - Uncle Stonehill's Hat
41. Die Young - Between The Glory And The Flame
42. Who Will Save The Children - Celebrate This Heartbeat
43. We Were All So Young - Edge Of The World
44. King Of Hearts
45. That's The Way It Goes (Live) - Edge Of The World
46. Shut De Do (Live) - Equator
47. Jesus - Breath Of God
48. Big Ideas (In The Shrinking World) 49. The Gods Of Men - Love Beyond Reason
50. Broken Places - Spirit Walk
51. Hymn - Love Beyond Reason
52. Billy Frank - The Lost Art Of Listening
53. Venezuela - The Sky Is Falling
54. What Do You Want From Life? - The Wild Frontier
55.Brighter Day - Can't Buy A Miracle
56. Get Together - The Wild Frontier
57. Ready To Go - Welcome To Paradise
58. Sing In Portugese - Wonderama
59.In Jesus Name - Lazarus Heart
60.Last Time I Saw Eden - Spirit Walk
61. Everything You Know (Is Incorrect) - Thirst
62.I've Got News For You (Paradise Sky Version) Welcome To Paradise -
63. Awfully Loud World - Can't Buy A Miracle
64.When I Look To The Mountains - Celebrate This Heartbeat
65.Mercy In The Shadow Land - Lost Art Of Listening
66. Backwards On Her Bike - Mystery Highway
67.Cosmetic Fixation - Equator
68.A Promise Made Is A Promise Kept - Lazarus Heart
69. The Keeper Of The Bear - Thirst
70. I Don't Ever Want To Live Without You - Return To Paradise
71. Finish Well - Spirit Walk
Happy Birthday Randy! I encourage anyone who spends time listening to these songs to buy some or all of them on Bandy Camp and give Randy a gift for the wonderful music he's been giving to us for a half-century.
First, the good news. I have lost 20.2 lbs this year, 7 lbs this week alone. The bad news in addition to losing 20.2 lbs this year, I have also gained 13.2 lbs. In other words, the 7 lbs. I lost this week is the only weight I truly lost all year. And since I tend to gain back all the weight I lose, we really can't be certain that those 7lbs we'll stay gone.
At the end of last year, I weighed myself as I do every Saturday and I weighed 259.6 lbs. I estimated by losing 1 lb a week for 10 weeks I could be below 250 by Saturday, March 11th. Today is March 11th and I now weigh 252.6 pounds. During those 10 weeks, I lost weight 6 different times and I gained weight 4 times.
Perhaps a little historical perspective would be helpful here. I weighed 174 lbs when I was a Freshman in high school. When I graduated high school I weighed 174 lbs. During high school, I could eat all the time and never gain weight which is exactly what I did. Between 18 and 33 the year I got married my weight went up gradually to somewhere between 200 and 220. In the first 16 or so years of my marriage it continued to go up until about 8 years ago I weighed myself and saw that I was 285 lbs.
In the past 8 years is when the yo-yo-ing began. Yo-yo-ing is only marginally better than unchecked gradual increases. Since June of 2021, I've gone from 262 pounds in June to 227.6 on Christmas Day 2021 but was back up to 263 by January of this year. That's a year 1/2 long yo-yo.
I've been wanting to post about my weight loss/weight gain struggles here for a while. I feel a little like Piglet in the opening of Winnie The Pooh and The Blustery day. He's raking leaves and generally gets blown around by the wind when he says I don't mind the leaves that are leaving, But I don't like the ones that are coming. I don't mind losing 20 lbs in 2.5 months. I just hope the next time I say that I weigh 20.5 lbs less than I did 2.5 months before not just 7.
Blog Insider: An unsolicited and superfluous look inside the minutiae.
I'm a big fan of blogroll (Don't know what blogroll click here to find out.) At present, I have 8 different blogrolls on my home page, and we all know how painful that can be. The most recent one is called Blog Tryouts. I just started it earlier this year.
Blog Tryouts is exactly what it sounds like. I chose 8 blogs that I was not currently linking anywhere else in my blog and placed them in their own section. Some of these blogs like The Comics Curmudgeon and We Are That Family have been on my blogrolls before and I have decided to have another look at them. Others like Chicken Spaghetti and Laws of Gravity are blogs I have recently discovered and placing them on a blogroll for the first time.
Since the beginning of the year, I have been enjoying going to these blogs on multiple occasions and have added 3 to some of my more permanent blogrolls.
Laws of Gravity as I mentioned last month on my Januarying post is a blogger/substitute teacher and I have really enjoyed her tales from the front lines of education. I have added her blog to my Education and Special Needs Blog blogroll. Her most recent post is called Oblivious.
Rambling Ever on may well be my favorite of the blogs from blog tryouts. I feel like I have found kindred spirits in the group of writers who contribute to this blog. They have a very good 5 part series called The Forgotten History of Christian Rock with 5 Spotify playlists to help you not forget. I really enjoyed their recent post called I Love My Boring Church as our family has been on a church search for some time now and the post served as something of an oasis for me. I wasn't sure which blogroll to place Rambling Ever On, it could certainly go into my Bloggy Blogs category as they spray all to fields, but for now, anyway, I'm including them in the News, Faith, Opinion, and Insight Blogs section.
The Third Blog that earned a place on my blogroll team is Reflections On The Teche. I've seen this blog on several occasions through Poetry Friday. This week's Poetry Friday is at My Juicy Little Universe by the way. Feel free to stop in. I really like the poetry at Reflections On The Teche. I've even signed up to take part in the kiddie-lit progressive poem she's spearheading in April. One feature she does on her blog is This Photo Wants To Be a Poem. I particularly liked the submission called Sunrise Field. I have placed Reflections On The Teche in my Writing, Poetry, Publishing, and Book blogs section.
I will keep all 8 blogs up in The Blog Tryouts section until the end of March. In May I plan to link blogs that I discovered or rediscovered during April's A to Z challenge.