"...Thus grew the tale of Wonderland: Thus slowly one by one, it's quaint events were hammered out- and now the tale is done...the dream child moving through a land of wonders wild and new, In friendly chat with bird
or beast-and half believe it true..." -Lewis Carroll

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

The End and Christmas

Let the singing of the Hallelujah Chorus commence! The semester is officially over! I got an A on the Civil Procedure final and a B on the Tort Final. Not too shabby!

It's an enormous relief. Looking back, the semester seems to have flown by. But while I was in the midst of it, it seemed like it would never end. The most exciting thing is that when the next semester starts in January, it will be the beginning of the end! My last semester ever! Hallelujah indeed!

It's now exactly one week before Christmas and I feel like I can finally get into the Christmas spirit. In honor of the end of the semester and Christmas, I present for your consideration, one of my my favorite Christmas songs...It always makes me cry every time I hear it.


Tuesday, December 11, 2012

A Little Reflecting

Things have been stressful, to say the least, for the last few weeks in Wonderland. Make that the last month. Not much has changed, but for the moment, my outlook has.

I'm feeling pretty positive and have enjoyed my day quite a lot. As I was having my prayer time this morning, a feeling of absolute peace and joy swept over me. I was SO happy to have the ability to go to a quiet place and  pour out my worries and fears to the LORD. No, the situations won't change immediately, but there is great relief in rolling over some of the heaviness of the cares of this life onto more able shoulders.

Oddly enough, while I was at the gym earlier, that same feeling of peace and joy came over me again. There I was sweating it out on the elliptical and I was all of a sudden aware of God's presence in my life.

At a time when lately my days have been filled with a lot of anxiety and stress, these little moments are like little drops of ice cold water running down my throat...giving me that extra little push I need to make it through the rest of the day.

Life is mountains and valleys. Tomorrow may be a day when I'm completely overwhelmed and cannot find or feel God no matter how hard I try. Being able to remember that just a day before I was so aware of Him makes those dark places a little more bearable. Just because I can't feel God at the moment, doesn't mean he's not there.

Food for thought Blog Land!





Friday, December 7, 2012

Confessions

Hello Blog Land Citizens!

I hope that this post finds you all well and in the holiday spirit!

I've had several readers ask me how my novel went and figured it was time to confess that despite my best efforts, I was unable to finish. I did, however reach 35,000 words which is no small feat. I am continuing to write it, and will hopefully finish by the end of the month. I finish with one class on Sunday and the other next Sunday, so I should be able to devote more time to writing my zany tale.

I have also had several readers ask me to post another excerpt...so...here it is. Please keep in mind that this is still the roughest of rough drafts. No editing has occurred, so please excuse any grammatical or spelling errors.

Yes. She was definitely back in Fanglethorn’s office turned corridor of madness. Any second now she expected a decidedly Cheshire-y smile without a face to appear.
Had she fallen down on her way to the Professor’s office? Had she actually every made it there? Had she been hit by a bus crossing the street to campus? Had her Caramel Apple Spice from Starbucks been drugged?
She reached out and touched the black walls of the corridor. Real.
She reached into her pocket and felt the little gold snail nose. Real.
So what now? What had the note said? She must go forward to go back and must find what is hidden. Well, she had found one thing that was hidden and apparently the only way to get out of this madness was to go through another doorway.
She just hoped that whatever insanity lay behind the next door, it wouldn’t include being abused by farm animals who thought they were people or being cooked for dinner.
Lucy walked down the corridor a ways and then paused in front of the door labeled, “Christmas, sir, is a humbug”. Hmm. Well if the people through this doorway thought Christmas was a humbug, then they were less likely to consider cooking her as the main course of a Christmas dinner.
She breathed in and the opened the door.
It was cold. That was the first thing she noticed on the other side of the door.
The second thing she noticed was that everywhere around her was an irritating humming sound.
She glanced around, attempting to determine the source of the humming. She appeared to be in someone’s home. An old home, the kind you see in movies with a Victorian setting. It apparently didn’t have central heating and and as she walked from room to room she noticed that none of the massive fireplaces were lit. No wonder it wsa freezing.
The house appeared to be deserted. Except for the humming sound, which led her to believe that someone was somewhere in the massive house.
She was still exploring when she noticed that one of the window sills seemed to be moving. Impossible. How could a window sill move. But wait. She was in Crazy Town. If pigs thought they were people, then window sills could move. Against her better judgement, she walked slowly to the window and as she did so, the humming sound grew louder.
What she saw terrified and disgusted her. On the sill, were little creatures, bout the size of humming birds, white, red, and green with the number 25 on their backs. She had found the source of the humming sound.
“What are these things?” she wondered aloud.
“They’re Hum-Bugs of course” a voice said from behind her.
Lucy whirled around around and promptly lost her balance and fell to the ground.
The humming noise increased. Were those buggy things laughing at her? She adjusted her glasses and looked at the person whose presence, until now had been unknown.
“You’re the snail girl!”, Lucy exclaimed in surprise.
“What?”, the girl asked.
“The snail girl, form the barn…don’t you remember me?” Lucy asked.
The girl just stared at her.
Lucy decided to try another tactic. “ So, uh, what did you say these things were?”
The strange girl looked around as if trying to figure out who was asking her the question.
“They’re Hum-Bugs.” She answered finally in her whispery voice.
“Well what exactly is a Hum-Bug” Lucy asked.
The strange girl once again looked around the room, as if trying to figure out how she gotten there and why Lucy was still asking her questions.
“Scrooge-Bugs. They’re bugs that Mr. Ebenezer created to ward off Christmas time. That’s why they’re at all the window sills. To keep the Christmas spirit from getting in.”
Lucy began blinking her eyes rapidly.
“But if they’re to keep the Christmas spirit out, then why are they red, white, and green? And why do they have the number 25 on their backs?”
The strange girl sighed. “ Because, they’re trying to make the Christmas spirit think that the house already is here in the house.”
Lucy thought about this for a moment. She tried to wrap her head around what the strange girl was saying, but when it came down to it, it just wasn’t making any sense.
“Well, I’m looking for something that’s hidden.” Lucy explained.
“Oh?” the girl said, “Well that’s nice, what is it?”
Lucy looked sheepishly at the child. “I was kind of hoping you could tell me”.
The child walked to the window sill and picked up a Hum-Bug. She pulled both of it’s wings off.
“ That’s strange. It seems odd trying to find something but not knowing what it is.” The girl said slowly. “ Like something a crazy person would do.”
The child picked up another Hum-Bug and began pulling off it’s wings as well. As she did, she turned her round, doll-like eyes on Lucy.

“Are you a crazy person?” She asked.
Lucy was about to reply with a resounding NO, but then she stopped herself. Maybe she was crazy. After all, she had just come from Charlotte’s Web Land and now she was apparently in some warped version of Charles Dicken’s A Christmas Carol.
“I-I-don’t know”.
“ If I were you” the girl whispered, “I would try to figure that out.”
“Duly noted” Lucy said, somewhat amused. “In the meantime, do you know where I might start looking for something that is hidden?”
“I think you should talk to Mr. Ebenezer. He’s around here somewhere. He never leaves this house anymore. He likes to talk to ghosts. Mostly his friend Jacob.”
Great. Now she was supposed to seek out a man who was obviously a little deranged that liked to talk to ghosts. And who tried to keep Christmas out by guarding his window sills with Hum-Bugs.
The strange girl was now humming to herself. Definitely something a little off about her too, Lucy decided.

Since she had seen most of the first floor, she made her way in the dimly lit rooms to a stairwell. It looked exactly like the stairwell in the movie version of A Christmas Carol. She half expected to find the undertaker and the maid waiting for her at the top. Thankfully no one was there. She turned to her left and saw a door with light coming from underneath. It was the only light in the long corridor. She went to the door and knocked timidly. After all, there would be a crazy man inside.
There was no answer. She knocked again, this time a bit louder. Still no answer. She was just about to knock one last time when the door opened.
“Were you intending to knock on my facce youg lady?” the man asked peevishly.
Before her stood an old man, stooped, with graying hair and in a dirty dressing gown.
She started blinking. “Uh, well, no sir”, she said in a whisper, “I was just about to knock again when you opened the door.”
“Knock again, eh? What? You think just because I’m an old man I can’t hear when someone knocks at my door?” here he took huffed. “What a stupid girl”.
Lucy was just about to say that she was quite tired of being abused by people who were obviously a bit insane, and had in fact opened her mouth to communicate this, when she suddenly remembered that she needed this old coot’s help. She shut her mouth. It wouldn’t do to offend him.
“I am sorry, sir. I just thought you might be asleep or something” she said in a conciliatory tone.
The old man cackled. “Sleep? Whoever heard of such nonsense?” He looked around as if talking to a room full of people. “There’s no time for such frivolous activities as sleep when there’s a holiday to keep out of the house! And the Hum-Bugs! There’s the Hum-Bug hives that must be maintained! Ha! Sleep the girl says!”
He cackled and made his way back to a huge and faded lazy boy chair.
 Odd. Did they even have chairs that reclined like that back in Dicken’s day?
“SO how did you get in my house, dumb girl? Did that old wing pulling monster of a child let you in?”
“Oh no! I came in through a door.”
“Well”, he said dryly, it would be most difficult to come in through a window, wouldn’t you say?”
Lucy rolled her eyes. These people and their wretched sarcasm.
“I meant a came in through a door in Professor Fanglethorn’s office” she corrected.
“Ah, Fanglethorn sent you, eh? Funny that. He usually sends only smart people through his office. He must have made an exception for you.” He glanced slyly at her from the corners of his eyes, trying to surmise whether such audacious rudeness would get under her skin.
Lucy blinked. After a few minutes of silence he spoke
“Well, I can see that you’re a hard nut to crack” he said, “so what can I do for you?”
“I’m looking for something, something that is hidden.” She explained.
“And let me guess, you have no idea what is hidden that you must find.”
Lucy nodded and the old man sighed.
“It’s always the same with these nit-wits Fanglethorn sends through. They’re always looking for something and don’t have any idea as to what it is. Looney it is.”
The phrase, “Pot calling the kettle black” ran through her mind. Of all the nerve.
Her mouth, however, she held shut.
Suddenly he flipped over in the chair and attempted a hand stand. The chair rocked precariously and he came flying out of it.
Lucy gasped and the humming sound which had grown quieter since she had entered the room, suddenly grew louder. She ran over to where the old guy lay.
“Don’t worry girl”, he said through his dressing gown which was now over his head, “I’m quite all right, it’s an amusement for Hum-Bugs you see!”
She took a step back and watched, astonished, as he righted himself.
“Good for the Hum-Bugs?” she asked.
“Yes, yes, yes. One has to keep them amused or they’ll bite you.”
“And what happens if they bite you?” Lucy asked.
“You’ll either turn into a Hum-Bug or be turned into a Christmas Ham.” The man said matter of factly.
“ I should have known” she said in an exasperatd tone.
What was with these people and their fixation of turning people into items to be eaten for dinner? And why did everyone seem to know who Professor Fanglethorn was?
“So please, sir, how can I find whatever it is that is hidden?”
“Oh that’s easy”, he explained, “you must become what you fear. Now go away.”
“Become what I fear?” she questioned.
“That’s what I said, stupid child. There’s something in this house that terrifies you, or else Fanglethorn wouldn’t have sent you here.”
Ebenezer approached her.
“Here” he said, “take a look at this”.
In his hand he held a Hum-Bug. Lucy took a step back.
“No thank you. I hate things that crawl.”
“Excellent!” he said happily, “Then we’ve discovered what it is you fear!”
Her jaw dropped. Behind her glasses, her eyes began to blink rapidly. She was too appalled to speak the words that had formed in her mind. She closed her mouth. Then opened it again.
“You know my dear” Old Ebenezer said in a confidential whisper, “I’m sure you’re quite an attractive girl, and I admit the lighting in this old room isn’t ideal, but with those glasses and your mouth opening and closing like that, you look like a cross between an owl and a cod fish.”
He finished this pronouncement with a snort and then collapsed into laughter in his chair.
To be honest, she was getting very offended with being called a cod-fish. The owl comparison she didn’t mind so much because she had always thought of them as a scholarly type of bird, like Owl in Winnie the Pooh. But a cod-fish? It had no redeeming qualities that she could think of. Except maybe that it was tasty to eat. And in light of her experience in the barn yard, that was the last thing she wanted to think about. She decided to ignore Ebenezer’s rudeness.
“So I must become what I fear? And what I fear most in this house are the Hum-Bugs. So I must become a Hum-Bug?”

“Ebenezer began clapping. “Bravo! What excellent deductive reasoning you have, my girl.”
“But how?” she asked.
“By letting it bite you of course!”
“But I thought you said if it bit you, you could be turned into a Christmas Ham!”, she practically shouted.
“My girl, we’ve established that I am not hard of hearing! Please lower your voice or I shall be forced to call for a policeman.”
“What?!” Lucy said, confused.
“ You will either be turned into a Hum-Bug or a Ham.”
“But I don’t want t be turned into a Ham! I don’t want to be eaten for Christmas Dinner!”
“Oh you won’t be” he explained calmly, “ At least not by me. Christmas, ma’am, is a humbug.”
“Well, that’s a relief” she said with a sigh.
“But all people turned into hams are promptly given to my friend Wilbur.”
Oh dear God. She could very well still end up being on that crazy pig’s table.
She took her glasses off and wiped them with edge of her sleeve. As if by wiping the smudges off she could also clear the confusion away from her mind.
When she put them back on, Ebenezer was so close that she could see his nose hairs. Ew. She almost gagged. As she took a step back, he stepped forward. There was no escaping this crazy man. He held out his hand to her again. From this proximity, she could hear that the Hum-Bug was not only humming, but was actually saying very quickly in a munchkin-like voice, “huuuuuuuuuum-bug, huuuuuuuuuuuum-bug”.
How gross and irritating. As the nasty little booger walked around in Ebenezer’s palm, she also noticed that a little red and green tongue with yellow spots flitting in and out of it’s tiny mouth. A decidedly earthy smell was emanating from it. It reminded her of something. Ah yes, smashed lightning bugs.
She was about to raise another objection to being bitten by the weird thing, when all of a sudden, Old Ebenezer sprang towards her, grabbed her hand, deposited the bug into it and then forced her hand closed around it. He jumped back cackling.
She gasped and then opened her hand just in time to see the Hum-Bug bare two vampire like fangs and sink them into the flesh between her thumb and pointer finger.
She barely had time to say, “Ouch!” before she became aware of a strange sensation in her legs. She looked down and she saw her legs literally shrinking away. What was that Alice had said? Oh right, shutting up like a telescope. That seemed to be exactly what she was doing. She felt herself shrinking and the room around her growing to massive proportions. The laughter still coming from Ebenezer sounded like the blast from an elephant’s trunk through a bull horn.
She tried to speak, but when she did, a long, butterfly-like probiscus extended from her mouth. It was bright red with green and yellow spots. Instead of words, a “huuuuuuuuuuum-bug” resounded from her throat. 
There's another little tid-bit to boggle your brains! 

Until next time!

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Give Me Until Then...

Rainy Sunday morning Blog Land, and I'm just waking up. Don't worry, I'll make it to the church house tonight.

Perfect day for snuggling up in the covers and listening to Ms. Adele...

Love this song for a lot of different reasons...