Monday, December 8, 2014

Place of Beauty, Place of Sacrifice



LADY COLUMBIA - Punchbowl Cemetery (public domain)


     It seems fitting one day after the anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the nearing of Christmas that we speak of a place of serene beauty. Punchbowl, National Cemetery of the Pacific, graced with the Hawaiian name, "Puowaina," loosely translated means “Hill of Sacrifice.” Why should we  speak of such a place of sadness so close to such a holiday of joy? As  the men and women who lie there gave up everything for their people, Jesus Christ, gave up a perfect place, and came to earth for the love of His people, us.
Punchbowl Cemetery  (public domain)

     Covering nearly 116 acres, Punchbowl lies in an old volcano crater, serene and stately, as it stands guard over its wards in the midst of a teeming, busy city. Like entering a quiet chapel from a noisy street, this peaceful place is adorned with white blooming plumeria, umbrella-shaped monkey pod and  Chinese flame trees. Brushed with  fuschia and coral bougainvillea along with seed-ladened  koa,  the crater’s rim blushes. A place of peaceful repose, fresh flowers brought by the public, decorate the graves and are removed only when they become unsightly and faded.

     As one enters  the cemetery “Lady Columbia” stands at the other end above Abraham Lincoln’s quote. Although written  to a woman who had lost five sons in the Civil War, it speaks for all who lie there. “ The solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.” The Courts of the Missing contain the names of 26,280 American servicemen whose dedicatory stone says it all, “In these gardens are recorded the names of Americans who gave their lives in service to their country and whose earthly resting place is known only to God.”  These inscriptions remind loved ones their sacrificial one is not forgotten by God and, hopefully, nor by us, either.  
   
     Although the idea to place a cemetery in Punchbowl was first introduced in 1890, the dream became a necessity to honor America’s war dead during and after  World War II.  Vietnam and Korean soldiers, both men and women, rest  there. It was agreed, that the land would not be sold, but donated. This happened in 1943. The bodies of fallen warriors from  prison camps in Japan and from Wake Island’s fallen arrived first. They  lie next to warriors killed at Guadalcanal, China, Burma, Saipan and Guam, totaling nearly 13,000 from various theaters in the South Pacific.  Some 44,200 military members and their families lie among the quiet and peace of this island place.    
     In August 1991, Punchbowl reached its capacity and today's warriors, like my friend’s husband, Byron, are buried at the State Veterans’ Cemetery in Kaneohe. For more than fifty years on Memorial Day, a beautiful event has occurred. The Hawaii Department of Agriculture invites the public of all ages, including school children to sew lei and bring them to community parks and fire stations. Boy Scouts place the lei on the graves.  These lei decorate the tombstones of all buried in both cemeteries. In 2013, the need totaled 50,000 for both cemeteries with 38,000 for Punchbowl alone. On Oahu, people were encouraged to buy from local flower merchants or use flowers from their own gardens, but flowers come from the other islands, as well. Each year, this customs reminds them of this great military sacrifice and allows them to be a part of this great endeavor.
     
      Many famous people are buried there,  like war-decorated island boy, Daniel Inouye, long-time Senator from Hawaii, Ernest, "Ernie" Pyle, journalist during World War II, and Clara H. Nelson, better known as "Hilo Hattie." But  many more  lie there, just ordinary "Joes" and Marys". They did their duty and loved their country. They will be honored by many, but only God will know their names.  

     Although I attended a Memorial Day service at Punchbowl, my  recommendation is visit when not so many people are bustling around there. This allows the strength of these sacrifices to permeate one’s soul. It also allows one to feel the peace of God in a place so hallowed. 

References


Acres of Honor.100th Infantry Battalion Veterans Club. Retrieved December 8, 2014  
           from http://acresofhonor.com/history.html

Bega, Rosa, Bourn, Jerry and Torres, Tasa. Punchbowl National Cemetery. Retrieved  
           December  8, 2014 from http://www2.hawaii.edu/~turner/oahu/pnchbwl.htm

HDOA Highlights Local Flowers to Honor Veterans on Memorial Day . Hawaii 
            Department of Agriculture. Retrieved December 8, 2014 from
            http://hdoa.hawaii.gov/blog/news-releases/2013-news-releases/hdoa-highlights-local-              flowers-to-honor-veterans-on-memorial-day/

National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific . VA National Cemeteries. US Department of
            Veteran Affairs. Retrieved December 8, 2014 from

             http://www.cem.va.gov/CEMs/nchp/nmcp.asp

National Memorial Cemetery of  the Pacific. Retrieved December 8, 2014 from      
             http://www.aloha-hawaii.com/oahu/national-memorial-cemetery-of-the-pacific/





Monday, December 1, 2014

Welcome to my blog! Thank you for reading it.

Bienvenue sur mon blog. Merci de lire.
      Willkommen auf meinem Blog. Danke für das Lesen es.
          Bienvenido a mi blog .       Gracias por leerlo.                           
                   Ласкаво просимо на мій блог  Спасибі за читання його
                                    Benvenuti nel mio blog. Grazie per la lettura.
                                               欢迎到我的博客    感谢您阅读它   
                                                           歡迎到我的博客感謝您閱讀它

Mail from Hawaii!


     Around Christmas time everyone waits impatiently for boxes from Amazon,  packages from United Parcel Service and cards and letters via the United States Postal Service. Some live by Facebook  and Twitter, but all of us can remember back in the old days when we received a letter, card or even a package in the mail with our name on it.  What an exciting and precious thing!. 
     Today I am going to give you a gift as precious as a day at the beach and  like a straw beach mat, strong and true.  I shall weave you a story how people used to get mail, and you will have a new appreciation for the phrase “snail mail.”   
From the time Captain Cook discovered the Sandwich Islands a.k.a. Hawaii Islands in 1778  until 1850 when the first postal system was established, mail happened, just not like you and I think of mail deliveries. No men or women showed up in little blue uniforms with envelopes or packages. As old as the Bible itself,  the desire to communicate via words on paper  found a place in the Sandwich Islands as well as on the Mainland. The Hawaiian language, unwritten until the missionaries came, already pulsed across the islands with messages of love, diplomacy, and governmental issues. During this time in the United States and Hawaii, English speakers addressed their sealed letters on the outside of the folded letter. Even without envelopes, correspondence reached its destination. (Pre-Postal)
     If someone in Hawaii wanted to send a letter to someone in the United States, it was their responsibility to check the times of departures for ships leaving the Honolulu harbor. Their letters, given to  harbor masters, ship captains, missionaries, and  acquaintances returning to the mainland made precarious journeys to their prescribed destinations. Often this precious cargo traveled a year before it reach its appointed destination. Sometimes it was shipwrecked and lost at sea. Some that survived tell us stories of old.      Three of the earliest Hawaiian letters came from a  nobleman, a king, and a wife, all different, but paramount to each in importance. They each paid a two- cent ship fee for their letters to be transported, a five- cent Hawaii fee and an additional fee,  depending upon how far it was going across the United States or the manner in which it went. Sometimes people paid a double fee in hopes that somehow it might help the letter reach its addressee. (Pre-postal). 
     In 1803, Don Francisco de Paul Marin, a Spaniard who lived in Honolulu, wrote letters of recommendations for sea captains wishing to do business up and down the California coast, thus, promoting commerce. (Pre-Postal) In 1810, King Kamehameha I sent at least two “royal” letters to King George III in England. Dictated to a sea captain, Kamehameha asked for English bunting and colors to be sent  to show  cooperation between the two nations. In one letter, he stated he expected his harbors to be neutral in England’s war with Napoleon.It seemed more a statement, rather than a request. One letter to King George III said that he and Kaumuali'i, King of Kaua',  had made a treaty and declared that  he now ruled over all the Sandwich Islands, a victorious announcement. (Hackler)
     But my favorite piece of mail promises true love will prevail. In 1817, a twenty-three year old named James Hunnewell from Charleston, Massachusetts was left in Honolulu by his ship’s captain for  the sole purpose of selling his ship and receiving payment in sandalwood. (Shipping) While he lived in beautiful Hawaii, his wife, Susannah lived in cold, frigid Massachusetts. As this happened several times, they corresponded with one another during these periods of separation. To be exact, Hunnewell saw Susannah only seven months in the first eleven years of their married life age. One of her surviving letter records how much she missed him. She said the more she missed him, the less she adjusted to it. (Hunnewell Collection)  Her love and those letters drew him back, for after that time, he left his part of the business in Honolulu and returned to Charleston. (Hawaiian Trader)
     As far as inter-island mail in the Sandwich Islands,  people carried mail for one  another when going to a different island. Finally, in 1850, a formal postal system was set up by the government. From 1850-1859 in Hawaii, all domestic mail was delivered free of charge.  That included everything from pineapples and coconuts, to hats and flammable liquids. And for the most part, the Hawaiian  postal system put them in the hands of delighted receivers. (Local)
By  1859 these rates applied to Hawaiian mail.  Although almost hilarious to us, they are divided meticulously. 
  • 15¢ to register any kind of mailable matter; (Now that covers a lot of stuff, and you did not  even have to put it in a box in those days! Boy! Could you have a lot of fun with that one! I suppose a bicycle would not be considered mailable, would it? )
  • free for newspapers sent from the office of publication to subscribers;
  • 1¢ for all other newspapers; (Even the New York Times!, that is if you wanted to send it to a friend after you read it. You can believe they did that!)
  • 1¢ per ounce for bound books; (This would be like the Book Mobile without the bus! )
  • 2¢ each for pamphlets under 200 pages and 4¢ for pamphlets of 200 pages or more; (That would cover a phone book, except they didn’t have telephones.)
  • 2¢ per ½ ounce for sealed packages; (What if the seal popped in transit? Then what did it cost?)
  • 1¢ per ounce for parcels of small bulk without letters, papers, liquids in glasses or anything injurious to the contents of the mail bag; (I loved this one—injurious to the other contents-Does this eliminate chickens, because they might eat other things in the mail bag,  since chickens can cause such damage? I wonder if that covers perfume, since that might be injurious to the chicken should it drink it—one marinated bird, ready to grill, huli-huli prepped chicken upon arrival!
  •  free for drop letters mailed at the office of "delivery" (no city or town carrier service existed then so "delivery" was at the post office when someone called for their letters);  (You could send out party invitations free!) (Local)
     Those days have slipped into the mist of time. From the beautiful Hawaiian islands to the snowy Massachusetts,  people wrote to one another.  They conveyed their thoughts, their hearts desires, and their most precious possessions. We do the same as we click our texts as quickly as we can, whether we “live Hawaii” or in the cold Midwest, whether it was a letter that took a year to reach us or five second text from Honolulu to St. Louis. All of us want to stay connected.  When we send a written card or letter, we allow our friend to visit with us over and over as they look at that card more than once.  Call me “old fashioned,” but I think I will send out Christmas cards again, so people can feel my love and perhaps, some of them may even get a bite of huli-huli chicken. 
 Try it!  Say Merry Christmas this year,  using snail mail, and  connect with someone you love. It will make their day and bless yours. 


                         

Monday, November 24, 2014

Thanksgiving Then and Now

Happy Thanksgiving! 
     Holidays are almost never deleted from the calendar, just “edited’ if you will, changed to shape society.  Sometimes that is good, sometimes not. When we change them to suit society, we often lose the original meaning. I do not intend to “take to preachin’,” but a little soul searching will not hurt any of us.  
     Ask a seven or a 17 year-old where  Thanksgiving originated and instead of mentioning Pilgrims and Massachusetts , some will most likely say “on a football field.” 
     The Pilgrims, early settlers to our shores, spent some time in the field, but it wasn’t a football one. It was a field planted with corn, and they were thankful to have that.  They sang hymns like, “Now we thank all our God with heart and hands and voices….”(Rinkart) Children can no longer define the word “hymn” either, unless they are from Texas Aggie country where they sing the Aggie “War Hymn.” Called that by Texas A & M, that song will be sung Thursday in honor of their glorious football team. I love football as much as the next person, I am just saying.
      Both now and then people feasted for different reasons. Currently, some people do not thank anyone for their meal, not even their spouses, for they think they worked hard and paid for it, so they deserve it. I really doubt any of us  deserve all we receive in this country. We have been given more than we could ever achieve on our own, so let us take a moment and thank the Giver.  
Thanksgiving tea party for things both great and tiny. 


     Of course, some things never change as the women spent some time in the kitchen back in the 1620’s, as we do now.Nothing warms our souls, though, like good memories. I have sweet memories of my mom, grandma and aunts all in the Grandma’s kitchen. Nowadays people go to places like Honey Baked Ham and KFC and buy a ready- made meal. I say if that makes you happy, do it, but don’t forget to thank the workers who prepared it, so you wouldn’t have to spend time in the kitchen. No turkey for you? Spam and turnip greens, or huli huli chicken and rice instead of turkey will fill your bellies just as well. Just be thankful and not to yourself. Humbly bow your head in thanks to the Provider of All Good Things. If you have children, lead by example, and not just on Thanksgiving. 
Huli Huli Chicken and Rice For Thanksgiving? Be thankful!
     Check out this football game video between Princeton and Yale, yes, really they played football.   The first championship football game was played in 1876. (Thanksgiving) Besides the players, check out how dressed up the men were.  How things change!
http://www.loc.gov/item/00563607/ Yale and Princeton football game, 1903—Yes, they were already doing it then! The first football game on Thanksgiving came in 1876 with the Yale Bulldogs winning.  By the 1890’s over 5,000 high school, club and college games were played on that day.  Now that is what I call thankful for football. (Thanksgiving)


     Here is an easy to-do Thanksgiving project --Everyone who visits on Thanksgiving can participate. Purchase a plastic tablecloth at a dollar store. Gather several permanent markers. Put them on a plastic tablecloth spread on a surface that is accessible to most heights. Then place the permanent markers and a  tent card with the words, “Write or draw something you are thankful for this Thanksgiving.”  It will be a new twist to the old “What are you thankful for” before the meal, and quiet people might surprise you with their “thank yous.” If you watch, you will see your guests going back to check the tablecloth art.  
           
References
Rickart. (1636). Baptist Hymnal (11th printing). Nashville: Convention Press.


Thanksgiving Timeline. 1541-2001 Thanksgiving Timeline. Retrieved November 23, 2014 from http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/presentationsandactivities/presentations/thanksgiving/timeline/1876.html

This is to honor a soldier:
Retired US Army Staff Sergeant Miguel Ortiz and his wife, mother-in-law and 15 year-old son were murdered  in Puerto Rico in their home by thugs who owed them rent. A 13 year-old son survived. SSG Ortiz had been a professor for nearly 20 years at Puerto Rico's American Military Academy,where his sons were enrolled in the eighth and ninth grades. Pray for the living son that someone will come and help guide him through this sad time, and that God will become real to him. 

Coto, Danica. (November 18, 2014). Ex-Army sergeant among 4 killed in Puerto Rico. AP. The Big Story. Retrieved November 23, 2014 from http://bigstory.ap.org/article/3cb4ab14aef241049a46e958ab0fe164/ex-army-sergeant-among-4-killed-puerto-rico


DON'T SHOP ON THANKSGIVING! MAKE THE MERCHANTS WISH THEY WOULD HAVE STAYED CLOSED! STAY HOME WITH YOUR FAMILY! 





Monday, November 17, 2014

A Salute to the Ladies Doing Their Job

These are tools of the trade for the military spouse

       I hope you observed Veteran’s Day. If you did not, you can combine my challenge and veterans and their wives. Today is E-card day. Send a card to as many friends as you have time, as well as veterans. Write something besides your name if you want them to respond to you and then total up your cards and we will add up how many cards we sent, and how many we received. See, I told you, the challenge could be combined with your thanks to a veteran and to their wives.
Our country honored United States’ veterans last Tuesday. I am here to honor their spouses. The veterans are the one who protect and defend the nation against all enemies, both foreign and domestic. They move in harm’s way and pretend it is normal. Yes, they need God’s help to do it. You know the spouses, too. They look like regular people, but sometimes their jobs are not. It includes protecting the home front against all enemies both foreign and domestic. That includes everything from lazy children who won’t do their chores to people who think their husband can’t hold a job, because the military keeps moving them. They pick up the kids after school, organize booster bake sales, as well as stay near Skype during deployment, and pray like the kids’ lives depended upon it. For it does, for those little buggers will push their mom to the edge of the pool whether their dad is gone or not.
             So here is a list of warriors and their wives. Their service expands from World War I to the war that now rages. I am sorry I cannot use their surnames, because some of them will never see their names in print. They will go about their lives and serve their country. They will be buried, and no one will know the difference, except there will be a difference. Warriors  have done their duty and beyond, and as well as their spouses. So I will say it again, when you send out your e-cards, send a couple to military wives.
            In honor of these wives, I humbly post this poem. It only touches the surface of the job the military wife does day after day, because her husband is called to be a warrior.

            Here’s to Anne, Becky, Cheryle, Diane, Eunice, Florence, and a million more whom I proudly served with and whom I delightfully call “my friend”.
A Tribute to the Warrior Wife
Love recruited the Warrior Wife for this assignment,
   Her voluntary enlistment lasts a lifetime—
       She knows no retreat for love of her Warrior Man keeps her here.
          Her swearing in came before God, friends and flowers.
               Her “I do”, given freely and without reservation, promised
                     Till death do they part, she and her Warrior Man.
        

Warrior wife’s survival kit includes laughter and a great respect for the power of prayer.
She speaks “militaryese” fluently with her family of military sisters.
While her anchor’s away, she taxis kids on three continents and on both sides of the road.
With artistic flair, she creates an address book that would make Picasso look sane.
An army of one, Warrior Wife destroys mounds of laundry which threaten the home front.
She holds her Warrior’s heart, and small hands, as well the American flag and a pet leash.

 Warrior Wife can fix a flat, sometimes,
               And kiss a scraped knee better every time.
                       Warrior Wife holds down a job part- time.
She makes friends and her famous fire-breathing chili lots of times.
                                                 She changes diapers a million times.
                                                              Regardless of duty station, she births babies in due time.

Warrior Wife’s pay day comes in the form of a candy bar.
Remote duty continues as the battle for the TV rages.
Their college student studies a thousand miles away on an unaccompanied tour.
Temporary duty finds her soaking in endearing emails and a hot bath.
Covert missions include her best “under covers” work.
Wild blue yonder orders do not scare her for she trusts the Supreme Commander.

And, at the end of the day Warrior Wife can be found on her watch,
            Continuing the cadence begun by previous sisters,
                    Waiting—Waiting at the kitchen door,
                             Waiting on some reunion- ready runway
                                          Waiting on some eternally mist-kissed dock,
                                                  Always waiting, waiting for her Warrior to return.
                                                                                                            --Frances L. Lewis

Monday, November 10, 2014

The first of five parts. 
Lava on the Mountain and Lava in the Cake 
Maui "lava" dirt
            If I were a clever writer, I might be able to connect Lava Cake and, Kilauea (Kill-uh-way-uh),  the active volcano in Hawaii that belches lava continually, even now.  It all started thirty years ago in January, 1983, when we lived in Hawaii. Kilauea started living up to its name which means “spewing.” Sometimes a lot, sometimes a little, it has spewed out two-thousand degree magma, called lava, once it hits the surface nearly all that time. It has now reached homes.
  At first, I checked listings for a volcano holiday. Then I thought, get real. You don’t honor something that happens every day. Like you carry out the trash every day, but we don’t have Trash Day.  I take that back. Our trash day is every Wednesday. But we don’t honor eggs or black shoes, even stilettos. Maybe it is because volcanoes are boring to some. You cannot accessorize, nor  go to lunch with one. The most provocative thing Kilauea does is run off at the mouth all the time. We all deal with people doing that without making a holiday for such people. We don’t even want to crack that door, or, in this case, crater floor and observe anything like that. That’s like having a Pick Your Nose Day. It is disgusting, and people may do it, but you do not want to make it legal and let them celebrate it.  But we will join Kilauea and cake. It seems only reasonable.  My first experience with Lava cake came from a plaid Betty Crocker cookbook many moons ago. It seems I started looking for new and exciting recipes to try on my newly married husband. The notation I have next to that recipe says, “Husband doesn’t like this.” So much for chocolate cakes with innards that belch out goo when you poke fork into them.  But I shall try again in honor of the longest running show on earth. Kilauea. And if it comes out funny or misshapen, it’s ok. It’s a lava cake.   
Page 2
 4-3-2-1  Kilauea Crater cake a.k.a. Chocolate Pudding Cake

Preheat your oven to 350°. We’re baking cake here, not producing  molten lava. 
 This is a blow-by-blow to make your own lava cake. Since it  is  lava cake,  no one’s has to look like Martha S’s, because this is your own creation!
Combine these four ingredients and ¼ teaspoon salt in 1-9 inch pan.
Mix 1 cup all-purpose flour, ¾ c. sugar, 2 Tablespoon cocoa powder (unsweetened) 2 teaspoon baking powder. 
Combine these three ingredients and add to dry mix, mixing thoroughly. Mix in  ½ c. milk, 2 T. oil and 1 t. vanilla.
 Spread evenly in pan (This stuff will look like brown paste! It has the consistency of Play-doh.)Optional : If you want to add ¼ c. coconut, that will be your plants your lava picked up as it traveled in your oven.
 Mix these two ingredients and sprinkle over paste.Mix 3/4 c. 

packed brown sugar and ¼ c. cocoa powder (unsweetened). 
Sprinkle over brown paste. (It does looks like dirt, does it not?)
  Don’t forget to pour 1 ½ c. boiling water over batter. Don’t mix in, just leave it alone. 
My "lava" dirt without hot water-Add it. 
Bake at 350° F (175 °) for 40 minutes.  Let rest for 15 minutes.  (See rest on next page.) 

 

Page 3

Bake at 350 ° F (175 ° C) for 40 minutes. Let stand 15 minutes, then spoon into dessert dishes or cut into squares. Invert each square onto dessert plate and spoon sauce over each serving. Top with ice cream or whipped topping, if desired.
Real lava on the Big Island
P.S. A little hint. The cake is done when the cake part is on top and the bottom is of a pudding consistency. The top, though very authentic looking, will be springy to the touch.







There are four parts of this, so if this comes to your email first, you need to wait for all the parts.





My "lava"

Please say a prayer for these people who are losing their homes because of Kilauea.         

Pavement Cake

 For those of you who would like to repave your driveway and thought the budget could not handle it at the moment, I have good news for you.  My first attempt at this recipe had no baking powder in  it. But if you can get it chiseled out of the pan, it makes great pavement for the driveway.  It will stop the kids from complaining when they have a bicycle wreck. Providing they still have their teeth, they can have a little snack before they get back on their bikes.
Have a great week and give thanks!

Monday, November 3, 2014

Don't Feed Worker's Block Chocolate
           
                                                          
                                            Thanks to Brad H. for monster art. 
Most creatures on this earth we try to protect  from becoming extinct, but Worker's Block and other hairy beasts like him must be driven into extinction. They must not be allowed to invade and control our lives. WB,  a mean ugly beast, eats my creativity and my peace of mind.  So away with him, I say.

First, scare him away with Post-it  notes.  Keep them in the bathroom, near the desk and even in the car for when good ideas hit. Good ideas, sneaky little devils who like to play games, come to you when you are in the middle in potty training or rush hour traffic, times when free hands are a commodity. But you don't want them to escape. Better yet, use your smart phone, recording your ideas on it. I am sure WB can't outsmart it. Few of us can.

Do not stop working on your project. WB hates the sound of the keyboard clicking away, things being sorted, or anything that sounds like accomplishment.  In fact, he will run away on his own cognizant if he hears those kinds of noises.  When you quit trying, that's when he becomes fat, happy, and, worse yet, sassy.

WB especially does not like you stopping to clean out a drawer if no progress can be made on your main  goal. He would rather you wander aimlessly through the house or play a mindless video game, rather than rewarding yourself accomplishing a little job.

When a writer or any worker starts doing something for someone else, instead of muttering and complaining, it always gets the kindness juices flowing.  If there's anything WB hates, it's kindness juices.  They are like pesticide. They will knock him out sooner than Raid on an ant.

There's one more thing he hates---chocolate.  Any worker I know worth his or her salt or chocolate, in this case, always keeps a stash nearby for such occasions that WB might be lurking  in the shadows. Don't stockpile beans or pasta, but a stock pile of chocolate will ward off  WB's cousin, Discouragement.  If inspired ideas are reinforced with chocolate, they begin a sweet assault like marshmallow soldiers.  No scientific studies have  proven this, but why take the chance when it comes to chocolate?

Lunch happens to be something else WB hates.  This seems paradoxical, but if you are lunching with friends, it clears your brain to come home and hit the problem full blast once your return home, be it writer's block or that scary closet. 

So the next time you get WB, remember all the weapons you have against him like your cell phone or  your work ethic.  Keep your kindness and chocolate lunch schedule poised and ready to leap. If you find you can't go to lunch, you might take chocolate tea to a neighbor. Your plan to make WB extinct might not work but, at least, you will have a delicious time finding out!

So here's my question for the week.  What do you do to prevent Worker's Block from taking over your life and have fun, as well? 

Stay tuned next week for "Lava in the Cake and Lava on the Mountain."