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  • Triple A Surgery Can Be Scary!

    I saw my vascular surgeon this Thursday morning and got the bad news that my arteries are much too small for doing the EVAR procedure to repair my abdominal aortic aneurysm. That means I’ll have to be opened up (big time!) and undergo the more lengthy and dangerous surgery with a much longer 2 to 3 month recuperation time, higher mortality rate, etc. Well, the good side is that after healing, I won’t have to keep going back regularly to make sure the stent stays in place and isn’t moving around! Bummer! Women’s arteries are just smaller than men’s and the cardiologist who did the stents on my heart’s blocked arteries said mine were VERY small. I’ll not have a lot of fun this summer! But I am planning on the 2 graduation trips in May and June to Atlanta and  Philadelphia before I have to go through all this stuff!

    After “googling” and reading about the mortality rates for people, especially women, over 75 years old undergoing elective AAA surgery, I’m not 100% sure I want to go through all this…..but on the other hand, if I don’t, my aneurysm could burst and the chances for survival would be even worse! I’ll no doubt go through it, but I would like to know more about my surgeon….like how many of these AAA surgeries he’s done and his success rate, ha! Good that he is a specialist. Read that this condition is more prevalent among men. Maybe it’s just that the symptoms for men are more apparent and easily diagnosed in male patients than in females. Hmmm…..Guess that makes me kinda special. And truly I’d rather have small arteries than a small mind anyway!

  • You Gotta Have Heart!

    Someone once told me, in a loving tone of voice, that I had a heart of gold. Well, it is turning out  to be a very expensive heart! I’m so glad I have Medicare insurance and a good supplemental policy to pay for all the tests and procedures I’ve had so far this year! All of them are related to the coming EVAR procedure to repair that doggone aneurysm!

    I saw the cardiologist this Wednesday who explained to me the abnormality found and the test results. It seems the bottom of heart not getting enough oxygen (if those tests and the results are accurate). I was directed to the “cath lab” where they took more blood.  A ”heart cath” or angiogram is scheduled for noon this coming Friday. I was told to pack bag in case I would be staying overnight. If these tests show there is blockage causing the problem, they will give me a stent. I haven’t had any symptoms, however, like shortness of breath or pain. All this has to be done prior to having my aneurysm repaired! One of my friends will drive me to the hospital and wait for me in case I get to come home. I’ll need a  driver since anesthetic is involved. And my little “murisopsis” Val will be coming Saturday. I’ll be in good hands so am not worried.

    I am hoping to get all this done and over with before the older granddaughter’s college graduation in May in Georgia and youngest grandson’s graduation in Pennsylvania in June.  On a happy note…my daffodils are all blooming their heads off! So cheery looking that a woman who was visiting and walking her ailing elderly father’s dog in the neighborhood, stopped to see if I’d give her a few to cheer him up. That made me happy. So, here is a photo of some of the hundreds I planted a few years ago.

    My daffodils 14 Mar 2012

     

  • What Americans Think of Obama’s Performance, etc.

     I really must share this from Forbes Magazine (Feb. 2012). It is quite surprising since Forbes is a very conservative business publication…I wonder if Steve Forbes (who wanted to be the Republican Party’s presidential nominee some time ago) is connected to the magazine…..

    What Do Americans Think Of Obama’s Performance As A President?

    by Chris Weigl, Screenwriter and Political Consultant

    A friend of mine put together an awesome handwritten sign outlining why she’s voting for President Obama this year, I think it says almost everything you need to know:

    Why I Support Obama

     

    Many Americans take it for granted that President Obama has been one of the most effective Presidents since FDR. It’s important to remember just how bad things were when he took office and how much he’s accomplished since he’s been in office.

    We were hemorrhaging jobs when this President took office and now we’ve gone from 10% unemployment down to around 8.5%. If the recovery continues on this path, we’ll be back to around 5% unemployment by 2016.

    It’s not just about jobs though, President Obama has also worked to restore America’s image around the world. When President Bush was in office we were invading countries for no reason, now we’ve left Iraq and are in the process of leaving Afghanistan.

    In case you needed a few other examples of what President Obama has accomplished I put together a list below:

    1. Extended child tax credits and marriage-penalty fixes
    2. Created an Advanced Manufacturing Fund to invest in peer-reviewed manufacturing processes
    3. Required economic justification for tax changes
    4. Implemented “Women Owned Business” contracting program
    5. Changed standards for determining broadband access
    6. Established a credit card bill of rights
    7. Expanded loan programs for small businesses
    8. Extended the Bush tax cuts for lower incomes
    9. Extended the 2007 Alternative MinimumTax patch
    10. Closed the “doughnut hole” in Medicare prescription drug plan
    11. Expanded the Senior Corps volunteer program
    12. Required insurance companies to cover pre-existing conditions
    13. Gave tax credits to those who need help to pay health premiums
    14. Required large employers to contribute to a national health plan
    15. Required children to have health insurance coverage
    16. Expanded eligibility for Medicaid
    17. Expanded eligibility for State Children’s Health Insurance Fund (SCHIP)
    18. Required health plans to disclose how much of the premium goes to patient care
    19. Established an independent health institute to provide accurate and objective information
    20. In non-competitive markets, forced insurers to pay out a reasonable share of their premiums for patient care
    21. Eliminated the higher subsidies to Medicare Advantage plans
    22. Expanded funding to train primary care providers and public health practitioners
    23. Increased funding to expand community based prevention programs
    24. Reinstated executive order to hire an additional 100,000 federal employees with disabilities within five years.
    25. Increased the Veterans Administration budget to recruit and retain more mental health professionals
    26. Expanded the Veterans Administration’s number of “centers of excellence” in specialty care
    27. Appointed a special adviser to the president on violence against women
    28. Fully funded the Violence Against Women Act
    29. Directed military leaders to end war in Iraq
    30. Began removing combat brigades from Iraq
    31. Created a military families advisory board
    32. Ended the abuse of supplemental budgets for war
    33. Made U.S. military aid to Pakistan conditional on anti-terror efforts
    34. Opened “America Houses” in Islamic cities around the globe
    35. Allocated Homeland Security funding according to risk
    36. Created a real National Infrastructure Protection Plan
    37. Increased funding for local emergency planning
    38. Extended monitoring and verification provisions of the START I Treaty
    39. Appointed a White House Coordinator for Nuclear Security
    40. Initiated a grant and training program for law enforcement to deter cyber crime
    41. Improved relations with Turkey, and its relations with Iraqi Kurds
    42. Launched an international Add Value to Agriculture Initiative (AVTA)
    43. Created a rapid response fund for emerging democracies
    44. Granted Americans unrestricted rights to visit family and send money to Cuba
    45. Restored funding for the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne/JAG) program
    46. Established an Energy Partnership for the Americas
    47. Expanded the Nurse-Family Partnership to all low-income, first-time mothers
    48. Required new hires to sign a form affirming their hiring was not due to political affiliation or contributions.
    49. Provided affordable, high-quality child care
    50. Recruited math and science degree graduates to the teaching profession
    51. Reduced subsidies to private student lenders and protect student borrowers
    52. Encouraged water-conservation efforts in the West
    53. Increased funding for national parks and forests
    54. Increased funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund
    55. Encouraged farmers to use more renewable energy and be more energy efficient
    56. Expanded Pell grants for low-income students
    57. Pursued a wildfire management plan
    58. Removed more brush, small trees and vegetation that fuel wildfires
    59. Expanded access to places to hunt and fish
    60. Pushed for enactment of Matthew Shepard Act, which expands hate crime law to include sexual orientation and other factors
    61. Repealed “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy
    62. Restored funding to the EEOC and the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
    63. Reformed mandatory minimum sentences
    64. Created a White House Office on Urban Policy
    65. Fully funded the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG)
    66. Established program to convert manufacturing centers into clean technology leaders
    67. Established ‘Promise Neighborhoods’ for areas of concentrated poverty
    68. Worked toward deploying a global climate change research and monitoring system
    69. Funded a major expansion of AmeriCorps
    70. Created a Social Investment Fund Network
    71. Bolstered the military’s ability to speak differentlanguages
    72. Appointed the nation’s first Chief Technology Officer
    73. Provided grants to early-career researchers
    74. Worked to overturn Ledbetter vs. Goodyear
    75. Created a national declassification center
    76. Appointed an American Indian policy adviser
    77. Created new financial regulations
    78. Increased funding for land-grant colleges
    79. Banned lobbyist gifts to executive employees
    80. Signed a “universal” health care bill
    81. Created new criminal penalties for mortgage fraud
    82. Required 10 percent renewable energy by 2012
    83. Released oil from Strategic Petroleum Reserve
    84. Raised fuel economy standards
    85. Invested in all types of alternative energy
    86. Enacted tax credit for consumers for plug-in hybrid cars
    87. Asked people and businesses to conserve electricity
    88. Required more energy-efficient appliances
    89. Created a ‘Green Vet Initiative’ to promote environmental jobs for veterans
    90. Created job training programs for clean technologies
    91. Required states to provide incentives for utilities to reduce energy consumption
    92. Supported high-speed rail
    93. Supported airline service in small towns
    94. Invested in public transportation
    95. Equalized tax breaks for driving and public transit
    96. Considered “smart growth” in transportation funding
    97. Shared environmental technology with other countries
    98. Doubled federal spending for research on clean fuels
    99. Provided grants to encourage energy-efficient building codes
    100. Increased funding for the Environmental Protection Agency
    101. Raised the small business investment expensing limit to $250,000 through the end of 2009
    102. Extended unemployment insurance benefits and
    103. temporarily suspend taxes on these benefits
    104. Supported network neutrality on the Internet
    105. Reversed restrictions on stem cell research
    106. Killed Osama bin Laden
    107. Doubled funding for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, a program that encourages manufacturing efficiency
    108. Included environmental and labor standards in trade agreements
    109. Created an international tax haven watch list
    110. Made permanent the Research & Development tax credit
    111. Required automatic enrollment in 401(k) plans
    112. Required automatic enrollment in IRA plans
    113. Created a consumer-friendly credit card rating system
    114. Created a $60 billion bank to fund roads and bridges
    115. Required full disclosure of company pension investments to employees
    116. Provided easy-to-understand comparisons of the Medicare prescription drug plans
    117. Invested in electronic health information systems
    118. Phased in requirements for health information technology
    119. Required that health plans utilize disease management programs
    120. Required providers to report measures of health care costs and quality
    121. Held hospitals and health plans accountable for disparities in care
    122. Implemented and funded proven health intervention programs
    123. Prevented drug companies from blocking generic drugs
    124. Allowed Medicare to negotiate for cheaper drug prices
    125. Worked with schools to create more healthful environments for children
    126. Improved recruitment of public health workers
    127. Mandated insurance coverage of autism treatment
    128. Fully funded the Combating Autism Act and Federal Autism Research Initiatives
    129. Doubled federal funding for cancer research
    130. Increased participation in cancer-related clinical trials
    131. Fully funded the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
    132. Set a national goal to provide re-screening for all 2-year-olds for developmental disorders
    133. Commissioned a study on students with disabilities and their transition to jobs or higher education
    134. Set goals and timetables for implementing Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act
    135. Created a best practices list for private businesses in accommodating workers with disabilities
    136. Launched educational initiative for employers on tax benefits of hiring employees with disabilities
    137. Reduced the threshhold for the Family and Medical Leave Act from companies with 50 employees to companies with 25 employees
    138. Provided a $1.5 billion fund to help states launch programs for paid family and medical leave
    139. Required employers to provide seven paid sick days per year
    140. Streamlined the Social Security disability approval process
    141. Expanded Veterans Centers in rural areas
    142. Established standards of care for traumatic brain injury treatment
    143. Made the Veterans Administration a national leader in health reform
    144. Reduced the Veterans Benefits Administration claims backlog
    145. Instituted electronic record-keeping for the Veterans Benefits Administration
    146. Expanded housing vouchers program for homeless veterans
    147. Launched a supportive services-housing program for veterans to prevent homelessness
    148. Expanded the Family Medical Leave Act to include leave for domestic violence or sexual assault
    149. Fully funded debt cancellation for heavily indebted poor countries
    150. Created a fund for international small and medium enterprises (SME)
    151. Launched robust diplomatic effort with Iraq and its neighbors
    152. Provided $30 billion over 10 years to Israel
    153. Limited Guard and Reserve deployments to one year for every six years
    154. Ended the “Stop-Loss” program of forcing troops to stay in service beyond their expected commitments
    155. Fully and properly equipped troops
    156. Created a Civilian Assistance Corps that would organize private sector professionals to help in times of need
    157. Included humanitarian international missions in long-term budgeting
    158. Reviewed weapons programs
    159. Modernized ships and invested more in small vessels
    160. Set standards for when the government should hire defense contractors
    161. Restored the government’s ability to manage contracts by rebuilding our contract officer corps
    162. Created a system of incentives and penalties for defense contracts
    163. Establish a Global Education Fund
    164. Strengthened the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI) aimed at stopping spread of weapons of mass destruction
    165. Organized successful Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference in 2010
    166. Expanded federal bioforensics program for tracking biological weapons
    167. Developed a comprehensive cyber security and response strategy
    168. Mandated standards for securing personal data
    169. Required companies to disclose personal information data breaches
    170. Worked to persuade the European Union to end credit guarantees to Iran
    171. Seek to negotiate a political agreement on Cyprus
    172. Restructured and streamlined USAID
    173. Increased the size of the foreign service
    174. Urged China to stop manipulation of its currency value
    175. Pressed China to end its support for regimes in Sudan, Burma, Iran and Zimbabwe
    176. Created a public “Contracts and Influence” database
    177. Required Cabinet officials to host Internet town hall meetings
    178. Conducted regulatory agency business in public
    179. Promoted more pre-school education
    180. Expanded Early Head Start and Head Start
    181. Reformed No Child Left Behind
    182. Doubled funding for Federal Charter School Program and require more accountability
    183. Addressed the dropout crisis by giving schools incentives for more dropout prevention
    184. Created Teacher Residency Programs that will send teachers to high-need schools
    185. Expanded teacher mentoring programs and provide incentives for more planning time
    186. Promoted innovative ways to reward good teachers
    187. Simplified the application process for financial aid
    188. Increased the number of high school students taking college-level courses
    189. Created incentives for tree planting and promote carbon sequestration
    190. Improved water quality
    191. Regulated pollution from major livestock operations
    192. Strengthened federal environmental justice programs
    193. Increased funding for organic and sustainable agriculture
    194. Partnered with landowners to conserve private lands
    195. Created a community college partnership program
    196. Increased funding for progams that conserve lands and habitat for select species such as the Osceola turkey
    197. Supported wetlands protection
    198. Promoted economic development in Mexico
    199. Supported repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)
    200. Vigorously pursued hate crimes and civil rights abuses
    201. Signed the Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation Prevention Act into law
    202. Supported regional innovation clusters
    203. Helped low-income areas get phone and Internet service
    204. Created a Homeowner Obligation Made Explicit (HOME) score for mortgage comparisons
    205. Increased the supply of affordable housing throughout metropolitan regions
    206. Invested in transitional jobs and career pathway programs
    207. Fully funded the COPS program
    208. Improved emergency response plans
    209. Capped interest rates on payday loans and improve disclosure
    210. Expanded public/private partnerships between schools and arts organizations
    211. Improved climate change data records
    212. Supported improved weather prediction program
    213. Offered prizes for advances in consumer technology
    214. Encouraged contests and programs to interest students in science
    215. Increased research opportunities for college students
    216. Strengthened the levees in New Orleans
    217. Directed revenues from offshore oil and gas drilling to increased coastal hurricane protection
    218. Shook loose federal money for rebuilding the Gulf Coast
  • Thou Shalt Be Smitten!

     I love the message and this political cartoon. When I taught grades 4 through 6 science and art in Flint, Michigan we had a Psalm read at the beginning of each school day. I don’t believe we had any children of faiths other than Christian or Jewish but perhaps we did and I just didn’t know about it. Anyway, a political cartoon can say so very much in just a few words. This one does that so very well and with much humor too.

    Ballot Box religion

  • Gender Equality

    Regarding the debate about contraception and what insurance companies should and should not be required to cover, I’d really like some gender equality here….and some common sense to be applied!  Insurance prescription drug plans already cover the cost for Viagra, Cialis etc. So I really do believe and think it is quite logical for the government to demand insurance companies, before agreeing to pay for men’s erectile dysfunction treatments, require that all men seeking treatment undergo both psychological and physical exams (rectal digital one) and also, before going ahead with any treatment, view a video of the medical procedure done on men suffering from the ”over 4 hour erection” problem which evidently is dangerous and can occur….or require these same men to choose celibacy instead of treatment if they refuse to comply with these regulations. A couple of women in Congress have already proposed similar bills.

    The Democrats may play that old GOP wedge issue game and use this contraception and women’s health care debate for a wedge issue in the coming election. If they are smart, they should use it along with the need for jobs, energy independence, developing alternative energy fuels, and the growing economic disparity. It will be an interesting election year. 

  • Remember Fender Skirts ?

    Words, like people, change, get replaced and retired, forgotten and some of them finally like us….die. I remember talking one day to a fellow teacher who had a cat and told her about how when I was a youngster I had a great big pet tom cat thatused to jump from the back of our parlor davenport up onto the open transom and loved to sleep up there. Her face got a ”Huh???” look on it. She had absolutely no clue as to what I was talking about so then asked me what a davenport was and what a transom was too. At least she knew what a parlor is. Here are some more of those now forgotten words and phrases….at least forgotten by the younger generations of today.

    Fender Skirts

    I know some of you will not understand this message, but I bet you know someone who might. I came across this phrase yesterday. ‘FENDER SKIRTS.
     
    A term I haven’t heard in a long time, and thinking about ‘fender skirts’ started me thinking about other words that quietly disappear from our language with hardly a notice like ‘curb feelers.’

    And ’steering knobs.’ (AKA) ‘suicide knob,’ ‘Necker’s knob.’

    Since I’d been thinking of cars, my mind naturally went that direction first.
    Any kids reading this will probably have to find some older person over 50 to explain some of these terms.

      
    Remember ‘Continental kits?’ They were rear bumper extenders and spare tire covers that were supposed to make any car as cool as a Lincoln Continental.

    When did we quit calling them ‘emergency brakes?’ At some point ‘parking brake’ became the proper term. But I miss the hint of drama that went with ‘emergency brake.’

    I’m sad, too, that almost all the old folks are gone who would call the accelerator the ‘foot feed.’ Many today do not even know what a clutch is or that the dimmer switch used to be on the floor.

    Didn’t you ever wait at the street for your daddy to come home, so you could ride the ’running board’ up to the house?

     
    Here’s a phrase I heard all the time in my youth but never anymore.. .. . ‘store-bought.’ Of course, just about everything is store-bought these days. But once it was bragging material to have a store-bought dress or a store-bought bag of candy.

    ‘Coast to coast’ is a phrase that once held all sorts of excitement and now means almost nothing. Now we take the term ‘world wide’ for granted. This floors me. 

    On a smaller scale, ‘wall-to-wall’ was once a magical term in our homes. In the ’50s, everyone covered his or her hardwood floors with, wow, wall-to-wall carpeting! Today, everyone replaces their wall-to-wall carpeting with hardwood floors. Go figure.

    When was the last time you heard the quaint phrase ‘in a family way ?’ It’s hard to imagine that the word ‘pregnant’ was once considered a little too graphic, a little too clinical for use in polite company, so we had all that talk about stork visits and ‘being in a family way’ or simply ‘expecting.’

    Apparently ‘brassiere’ is a word no longer in usage. I said it the other day and my daughter cracked up. I guess it’s just ‘bra’ now. ‘Unmentionables’ probably wouldn’t be understood at all.

       I always loved going to the ‘picture show,’ but I considered ‘movie’ an affectation.

    Most of these words go back to the ’50s, but here’s a pure ’60s word I came across the other day ‘rat fink.’ Ooh, what a nasty put-down!  And don’t you remember that funny word or phrase we used so much we wore it out and killed it…..”Nitty-gritty?”

    Here’s a word I miss – ‘percolator.’ That was just a fun word to say. And what was it replaced with ‘Coffee maker.’ How dull… Mr. Coffee, I blame you for this.
     

    I miss those made-up marketing words that were meant to sound so modern and now sound so retro. Words like ‘DynaFlow’ and ‘Electrolux.’ Introducing the 1963 Admiral TV, now with‘SpectraVision!’

      
    Food for thought. Was there a telethon that wiped out lumbago? Nobody complains of that anymore. Maybe that’s what Castor oil cured, because I never hear mothers threatening kids with Castor oil anymore.

    Some words aren’t gone, but are definitely on the endangered list. The one that grieves me most is ‘supper.’ Now everybody says ‘dinner.’ Save a great word. Invite someone to supper. Discuss fender skirts. Then go in the parlor and sit on the Davenport and remember those other forgotten special words. I’m sure many of the ones we use today will change in meaning or be forgotten by generations to come. Do you remember some other ones that are now history?

     

     



  • Getting Prepared: AAA Surgery

    I started this New Year with the news that my abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) was getting larger and needed to be repaired. The vascular surgeons regularly checked it for the past several years ever since the Lifeline Screening I’d had done at our church discovered it. Never had any symptoms but decided taking the test would be a good idea. I was right!

    Illustration of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm

     

    My nice Irish heart specialist doctor, Patrick C., said, “Joyce, get on the table and lay down. I want to feel your groin.” Now, there are a lot of things I could have said like “Oh, goodie” or “It’s been a long time”, et cetera; but I behaved myself with a simple, “Okay.” Irish had his way with me then said he thought I’d be a good candidate for the EVAR procedure which is much less invasive and also has a much faster recuperation time. He left a voice message to his EVAR specialist colleague describing me as a “slenderish 79 year old female.” He evidently kissed that Blarney Stone when he was in Ireland the last time. I wish I’d asked him to write that down so I could frame it.

    Anyway, the tests needed before any work could be done were delayed because a dreaded colonoscopy had been scheduled first by my regular doctor. So finally three weeks later the CT scan was done and I saw the doctors again and again. The EVAR surgeon, Dr. Cocco (as in hot chocolate) finally saw me again today and said he was ordering the right size stent for me but first more tests are needed! So next Tuesday morning I’m to be at the hospital for a Myocardial Perfusion Imaging test. They will inject me with some stuff that will make my heart race. I will fast 4 hours before, wear comfortable clothes and maybe while sitting 4 to 6 hours with a racing heart be able to finish that Winner Take All Politics  book I’ve been reading. The scheduler said to wear comfortable loose fitting clothes. At least it won’t be as bad as the colonoscopy.

    Then a week after that test, I’ll be taking another one….a pulminary test…..for my lungs and breathing etc. Then finally three days after that, I will see Dr. Chocolate again and finally he will schedule the surgery. He is left handed and writes like most lefties do. We talked about that since I’ve 2 left handed kids. He said the Belgium nuns used to get after him because of it and added that he does his surgery with his right hand. Hmmmm…..I hope that won’t be a problem.

    Needless to say, I’ll be glad when this is all over. I have two graduations to attend…one May 11 at the University of Georgia and another in June in Pennsylvania.

    I’m writing this for daughter Val….aka “murisopsis” who plans to come and visit me for a few days after surgery. That’s the best part of this….something to look forward to.

  • More Fun With Photos

    I thought it would be nice to see how putting a photo on a magazine cover would look so did a couple….plus a cube with me at age 4.. Honestly this Photomania stuff is really addicting. I think granddaughter looks nice on the allure magazine….and wish I had money so put me on Forbes, ha!  Enough playing around for me!

  • Having fun with photo technology

    I’m having lots of fun with Photomania….turning photos into sketches or special effects …. lots to choose from. Here’s a few that I’ve done in between coughing and wiping my sore drippy nose. It’s really so easy and just shows I’ve some time on my hand and am too lazy and don’t feel well enough to sweep and clean…will do that when I feel better! I recommend this free program for the fun you can have with it. By the way, the profile picture was done by turning a photo into a sketch.

  • A Ragtime Valentine Greetings!

     Here’s my Valentine’s greeting to all my Xanga friends. I hope you like Ragtime music and vintage Valentines. These are like the kinds we used to exchange in grade school back in the early 1940′s….Garfield Elementary School. Our teacher always had a  crepe paper covered cardboard box decorated with pink and red hearts on lace paper doilies. We’d all put our cards in the slot on top of the box….with the biggest nicest card for the teacher and our secret crush. I always felt a little sorry for the kids who didn’t get many. I always gave everyone a  card…..even kids who were class troublemakers or who weren’t  clean and didn’t smell very good. Anyway, if you click here, you’ll see some of those old fashioned greeting cards and can even try making some yourself and hope you enjoy them:

    Here’s my Valentine’s greeting to all my Xanga friends. I hope you like Ragtime music and vintage Valentines. These are like the kinds we used to exchange in grade school back in the early 1940′s….Garfield Elementary School. Our teacher always had a crepe paper covered cardboard box decorated with pink and red hearts on lace paper doilies. We’d all put our cards in the slot on top of the box….with the biggest nicest card for the teacher and our secret crush. I always felt a little sorry for the kids who didn’t get many. I always gave everyone a card…..even kids who were class troublemakers or who weren’t clean and didn’t smell very good. Anyway, if you click here, you’ll see some of those old fashioned greeting cards and can even try making some yourself and hope you enjoy them:

    http://animoto.com/play/lT39gluotHwTQ0nKYw0ueA?utm_source=&utm_medium=player&utm_campaign=player

    cupid on phone valentine