Click image to enlarge...
Click image to enlarge…

Good enough for cabin porn?

One of my favorite “eye candy” sites is Cabin Porn [follow the link if you don’t believe such a site exists!]; I submitted this cabin in Kewaunee Wisconsin…

CameraZOOM-20130219085341484-002

Posted from WordPress for Android

Wisconsin winter

This is the view on my road this morning…

image

Posted from WordPress for Android

Lawn Twinklers

8487189745_6a85188b2f_bI’d like to see some green grass about now! Bill Pevlor writes:

Now and then, we need to look at the simple things around us with new eyes…from different angles. This is a photo of my lawn early last spring – before the first mowing. I took this photo from just a couple of inches from the ground, early in the morning while it was still wet with dew. The circles in the background are all dew drops on grass in the background catching the light. Because I used a short depth of field with a telephoto lens, the background sparkles are out of focus. It’s a simple image… but something about it is very appealing to me.

via Lawn Twinklers – Dew on the Grass – Pops DigitalPops Digital.

Amen!

Daring Greatly

Click the image to get the book…

Frigid Sunrise Fog

Pops Digital

via Frigid Sunrise Fog.

Recovery

Melody-Beattie-8x6.jpgMelody Beattie writes:

Recovery is not about being right; it’s about allowing ourselves to be who we are and accepting others as they are. That concept can be difficult for many of us if we have lived in systems that functioned on the “right-wrong” justice scale. The person who was right was okay; the person who was wrong was shamed. All value and worth may have depended on being right; to be wrong meant annihilation of self and self-esteem. In recovery, we are learning how to strive for love in our relationships, not superiority. Yes, we may need to make decisions about people’s behavior from time to time. If someone is hurting us, we need to stand up for ourselves. We have a responsibility to set boundaries and take care of ourselves. But we do not need to justify taking care of ourselves by condemning someone else. We can avoid the trap of focusing on others instead of ourselves. In recovery, we are learning that what we do needs to be right only for us. What others do is their business and needs to be right only for them. It’s tempting to rest in the superiority of being right and in analyzing other people’s motives and actions, but it’s more rewarding to look deeper.
Today, I will remember that I don’t have to hide behind being right. I don’t have to justify what I want and need with saying something is “right” or “wrong.” I can let myself be who I am.

Beattie, Melody (2009-12-15). The Language of Letting Go (Hazelden Meditation Series) (p. 47). BookMobile. Kindle Edition.

How to Cook Bacon Perfectly Like a Chef

Stepcase Lifehack

via How to Cook Bacon Perfectly Like a Chef.

recite-4531--395682091-1ohkl5u

Start a Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑