Audrey had on some cute kitty socks!
Most of us have already seen these two, but they still bring a smile for me.
Can you possibly live without lighted reindeer? Oakland Nursery in Dublin OH offered lots of them for you to take home.
Though there were lots of stuffed reindeer, I was drawn to the penguins. since when are they part of the Christmas culture?
The first place cow on which any 2 year old could ride was so cute!
While my car was being worked on by "RT Auto" I got to see their window decorations...what kind of bird might this be?
I'm pretty sure this is a reindeer looking over the cars being fixed.
My son may have paid twice my weekly grocery money for their tree (closer to three times!) but I then spent about twice his tree price to have my car fixed!
Thursday was a real positive doctor’s visit though, where the vascular expert said my blood flow to my feet was better than last year, and so good I wouldn’t need to have it checked at all next year! I attribute it to having climbed stairs to the second floor at my son’s house for a week. By the time I left I could rely upon my leg muscles completely and didn’t have to pull myself up with my arms also on the railing! Of course I still was out of breath.
So now to get those lungs to work at a better level!
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Today's goddess:
The Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük is a 8,000-year-old Neolithic baked-clay figurine unearthed at Çatalhöyük, a Neolithic and Chalcolithic proto-city settlement in southern Anatolia which existed from approximately 7100 BCE to 5700 BCE (inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2012). It depicts a nude female seated between feline-headed arm-rests. Generally thought to depict a fertile Mother Goddess in the process of giving birth, a handful of scholars now suggest that such figurines (found in great numbers at Çatalhöyük) may represent elderly women who had risen to prominence and achieved status in Çatalhöyük. The sculpture is on display at the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara, Turkey.
Info from World History Encyclopedia




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There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.