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A quote to guide me….
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A memory to inspire me… { source }
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An idea to embrace henceforth…

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A quote to guide me….
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A memory to inspire me… { source }
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An idea to embrace henceforth…
All I can think to say is one of my favorite sayings: SPIT FIRE AND SAVE THE MATCHES.
This is an exclamation of surprise that means: Well, I’ll be darned! What do you know? Huh.
I’ve also heard this saying in a slightly more vulgar form wherein the “p” in spit is changed to an “h” thereby creating a different word that imparts a similar meaning. This ruder saying then sometimes becomes a phrase in a NSFW longer saying.
But this is a polite blog so we’re going with the sweet shorter version of the saying. Plus I like mine better. It’s cuter, rather dragonesque in its imagery.
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I only share this saying with you, my gentle readers, because it has come to my attention that some of my fellow Ohioans have asked one particular question of ye olde Google.
It is a question that I find to be an odd one, but then my fellow Ohioans often baffle me.
I’ve lived in this state most of my life, been educated here, but cannot explain how some of us are, shall we say, enlightened, while others are in the dark.
Dim. Lacking any spark whatsoever.
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This, I believe, explains how it is that the most popular question on Google that comes from the Buckeye state is: HOW TO MAKE FIRE?
I kid you not, as the following image shows.
It’s a question that suggests overall we Ohioans aren’t the brightest bunch of people, looking as we are for the answer to a question that researchers suggest our ancestors in the second part of the Middle Pleistocene knew the answer to.
But in Ohio today, not so much. 😉

{ Find out more about your state’s questions HERE. }
Trying to rid myself of the RNC’s frenetic vibes this week, I turned my attention to doing something productive.
I researched COLEUS.
I wanted to find out the names of the three varieties that are growing profusely in pots on our deck.
At the beginning of the summer I planted six different types of coleus in pots, but three died within weeks of planting. So I thought that next year I’d plant more of the ones that grew, if I could figure out/remember the name of each type.
But, of course, in the process of my research I found more information about coleus than I’d anticipated. Coleus has a long history.
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For instance, did you know:
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But my research, inspired by a desire to rise above politics, ended when I discovered the most ridiculously depressing fact about coleus. You see, in the language of flowers coleus means: “How dare you address me that way?!”
That is, the plant means ARROGANCE.
And it was upon learning this that I found myself circling back to my thoughts about the Tangerine Tornado + the Nattering Nabobs of Negativity. I couldn’t believe that I was researching a plant whose meaning embodied all that The Donald represents, when my goal was to avoid thinking or hearing on the news about his nonsense.
Yet here I was doing something good, trying to make the world a better place through learning, only to find myself tripped up by arrogance.
Now how defeating, and oddly metaphorical, is that?
Do you want to be happier about where you are in life?
Then I recommend you read the following recipe which will quickly make you incredibly content to be living in the modern world.
The recipe is from The Something-Different Dish, by Marion Harris Neil, Cookery Editor of Ladies’ Home Journal and author of this cookbook, published in 1915, a mere 101 years ago.
[She also wrote The Story of Crisco around this time. But I digress…]
Please keep in mind that a respectable cookbook published this recipe because [presumably?] people were eating things like this.
That they made at home.
Not that long ago.
So considering this reality, might I suggest that when you start to feel down about your life here in 2016, you need to remember that things could be a lot worse.
You could be eating Love In Disguise for dinner tonight. 😉
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