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4.28.2011

Juice Please!!!

This is not really anything super important but just a cute story that shows how thinking outside of the box can really be beneficial. My friends and family laugh because I am constantly coming up with "inventions" only to google them and find that someone in Japan has beat me to it....one day though my creative thinking will pay off just like you will read in this short bio that Lillly's did!!!


What is a 21 year-old girl named Lilly to do after she’s just eloped?


Lilly married Peter Pulitzer and escaped the hustle and bustle of New York City for the sun and sand of Palm Beach? With your husband running the family orange groves, why not start a juice stand?

And that is just what Lilly did back in 1959, but her new business venture soon gave her a closet full of juice-stained clothes. Inspired by the colorful nature of her newly dyed wardrobe, Lilly launched a line of brightly colored shift dresses covered in playful prints. It wasn’t long before her dresses became a hit in all of the country’s most fashionable resort towns, and soon ’60s style icons like Jackie Kennedy were wearing Lilly’s designs.Fast-forward 50 years, and Lilly Pulitzer prints are still a favorite for all those people that lead colorful lives.
http://blog.lillypulitzer.com/lillys-story/


Is that not just such a cute story? Just to think that I spend $60 for a Lilly Polo with the simple Palm Tree logo or at least $150 (if I find a good sale) for a bright multi colored dress ....and this all started with inspiration from juice stand stained clothes!

xoxo,
Faith

4.26.2011

Fellas....

With Easter having just passed something has been brought to my attention. I noticed this at church and then have been seeing it the last few days as more people are posting photos on Facebook in their Easter attire and now I am even seeing it at work.
I have noticed an abundance of men wearing ties incorrectly. Maybe this is something that happens often and because I do not wear a tie I never notice or maybe since the first crooked, too short tie caught my eye on Sunday morning I cannot help but pay attention to this now. Either way, to avoid having me walk up to you and adjust your tie (as some women should be doing before he leaves the house!) I have instead decided to give you a few tips I have gathered up along with pictorial instructions for how this little mishap can be corrected.
~For starters...The Length of the tie...If I see one more tie on a grown man that looks like he borrowed it from his five year old son, I may scream. Gentlemen, the front point of your tie should touch the waist of your pants or the top of  your belt....not the third button on your shirt or the bottom of your zipper.
~Next, just because the invitation says tie required or your sweety asks that you wear one does not mean you wear one just to "follow orders". Turn the closet light on when choosing a tie and don't just reach in and grab one to appease. This can be a tricky one for some even with the lights on...if you are wearing a blue shirt do not wear a same shade of blue tie - you do not want the tie to fade into the shirt but you do not want to grab an orange tie either, easiest idea is to wear a tie that is darker than the color of your shirt...remember, don't fade but don't clash-find that happy medium. If you choose to go with a patterned tie then make sure the main color of the tie highlights the suit color and the second color highlights your shirt.
As far as a striped patterned shirt always combine narrow stripes with wide stripes and never two of the same or similar kind. To stay on the safe side, keep it simple with a  solid shirt and you should be OK.
~Skinny ties can be good for some ensembles but for a general rule the width of 3.5in is a good choice.
~Tie your tie in front of the mirror, not riding down the road...this way you can see what everyone else sees, not just what you see when you look down. This will ensure that you can see the adjustments that need to be made with the length and to ensure that the knot looks like a knot rather than a jumbled mess.
So those are my pet peeves addressed, there are many other tie issues that could be addressed but that is why you have Google search!
Below you will see the instructions posted on the most popular ways to tie your tie. Hope this helps! :)




xoxo,
Faith

4.12.2011

Remember:

A recent assignment for one of my classes was to write my Ethical Will. An ethical will is not the same as the type of will where we list out our valuables that we want to leave behind but rather a list of our values that we want to leave behind.
I began my ethical will by saying something directly to my immediate family and then proceeded with what I would want read at my funeral to all of my other friends and family. I know that we often wait until a death or near death to share things like this so I decided to go ahead and share mine with you all now and Lord willing it will be a REALLY LONG time before this is read aloud at my funeral! :)

Excerpt from my Ethical Will written 4/6/11

Now for everyone else, I would like to share with you a few points that I have always strived to live by. Notice I said strived, so don’t be sitting there thinking off all the times, I didn’t, and instead be thinking of all the times ahead of you that you can!



When others let you down, don’t feel extremely hurt or surprised….We let ourselves down, how can we expect others not to?


Simple things, it is the simple things you miss when you lose something so remember to be thankful for and truly enjoy the simple things. It is not possible to name one thing you cannot live without, but you can name a million things…realize that you need them all.


Talk to God daily, not just when you need Him….truth is, you need him daily so make sure you tell Him or He will tell you.


Smile.


Do not stay angry. Most arguments last a few minutes and are over….let them be over. At some point in time you will look back and not even remember what the argument was about.


Do not have regrets. Even if you wish you could change something, don’t. It may not have turned out how you expected but learn from it rather than regret it.


Stay involved, surround yourself with people, you will find that in helping others you also reap the benefits. It makes you feel good!


Don’t be afraid to let the things that made you laugh when you were a child also make you laugh today. Build sandcastles, swing on a tire swing, and eat ice cream before dinner.


Make your children each feel special. My mom still gives me a piece of candy or tells me a “secret” and tells me not to tell my siblings this makes me feel special…just as it does them when she does the same for them. Never tell mom you know she does this for each of you.


Do not settle. With another person or yourself, do not settle, always have what you know you deserve.


Remember we are all different, our little things, or idea of settling, or what makes us laugh is different. So never belittle someone else’s ideas, just understand that they are different from yours…chances are if you stopped pointing and joined in, you may be able to add a few things to your lists of simplistic laughs!


Remember that because it hurts does not mean it is wrong. The pain will go away but the situation won’t, so just know that you will get through the hurt at some point. Also remember that point does not have clock so do not give it one.


Trust. Some people say they trust until the trust is broken. Fix it. This is a hard one but fixing it is not the problem….allowing it to be fixed is the problem. If your trust is broken again then fix it again. This does not mean keep getting your trust broken from the same situation, it just means repair it and move on while remembering, just because it hurts doesn’t mean it’s wrong


Love your spouse unconditionally with everything in you. If you truly do this, then many arguments will be avoided. Think about something you are truly passionate about, sports, children, your job…now think about how often you overlook the small stuff that can arise from this passion…be this way about your spouse.


Listen to people. Really listen. Don’t just hear, but listen.
Always remember people’s name. Nothing impresses them more or makes them feel important like being remembered. Even if they don’t remember yours, I bet they will remember you.


When you say you forgive, then forgive.


Forgiveness: To give up resentment of. –Webster

This is one of the only times I say to give up.


Nobody is made to flatter you, so when given a compliment, remember it is genuine and say “Thank you” instead of pointing out every flaw to show the person they are wrong. Just say thanks.


Always say what you need to say just not always as soon as you feel the need to say it. Write it out, put the note away, three days later read it…if you still want to say it without changing one small word on your paper then say it. But if you do want to change one word, then change it, put it away and try again three days later, continue this until it is ready to be said without changes or until you realize it never will be ready.


Take care of yourself. Do not go to the doctor only when 911 is in need of being called. Make sure you treat your body right…it’s the only thing that I can guarantee you will never leave you, it is always yours. How you choose to treat it at 15 effects how you have to treat it at 75.


Help people. Not only the people who help you or the people who would if they could, but also the people who can and never would…help them too.


Have fun.


When asked to keep a secret, keep it. Even if the person who tells you their secret tells a thousand other people you still keep it and as often as you may hear others speak of it, you don’t. Eventually this person will remember why it was so important to be classified as a secret in the first place…always know that you kept it just that, a secret.


When wanting to share your own secret, look in the mirror and share it with the person staring back.


Cry when you need to. Also, not only women were given tear ducts, there is a reason for that men…it’s ok to cry.


When stressed, If you pass an empty field, pull the car over, do a few kart wheels…the people waiting on you will understand or not believe you, either way I can assure you that once you catch your breath, you will be breathing better.


Send her flowers, buy her a dress, change the babies diaper and take her to dinner without needing a reason or special occasion.


Send him fishing, buy him a new Driver, change the air filter, and make him his favorite dish without needing a reason or special occasion.


Honesty is just as important to other people as it is to you…think of this kind of like you do the Golden Rule.


Be welcoming but not naïve.


Do your part and even above your part, but ask for help, there is a reason you are not the only person on earth.


Be thankful for your five senses…use them each for something good daily.

Remember to say always say Please and God Bless You.


Sip on your favorite drink. Taste your favorite meal.


Write important stuff down; remember to go back at some point read what you write down, to help you remember what is important and if it isn’t, if it should be.

I hope you enjoyed reading these as much as I enjoyed thinking about what is truly important to me and listing them all out...the best part is that I have added to it since my original assignment was turned in and only hope to keep this list growing! :)

xoxo,
Faith

4.07.2011

"Here He Comes!!!"

It is here...365 days ago today, Pawpaw passed away....It has also been 365 days since Pawpaw has been NOT been sick!!! :)
The day of his funeral I was standing on the balcony at the house just looking at the ocean when a sailboat went sailing by, it was so gorgeous, I actually ran and grabbed my camera and got a picture. I have seen sailboats on the ocean many times, but there was something about this one that was spectacular.
As anyone who knows me knows, I am obsessed with quotes and any time I can't sleep or have some down time I am looking up quotes....after seeing this sailboat I googled "sailboat quotes" and came across one of the most beautiful poems I have ever read and it could not have been more appropriate for that moment in my life!
During the funeral of pawpaw and a few months later of my uncle, I remember repeating over and over to myself  as if I could hear my grandmothers voice, "Here He Comes!" as it states in the poem.
At that moment, I realized why that boat of many made such an impression on me,(Never doubt that we each serve a purpose here on earth) that sailor, although he will never know it, on his way to his destination led me my destination of this poem!


"I am standing upon the seashore. A ship at my side spreads his white sails to the morning breeze and starts for the blue ocean. He is an object of beauty and strength. I stand and watch him until at length he hangs like a speck of white cloud just where the sea and sky mingle with each other.


Then someone at my side says "There, he is gone."

"Gone where?"
"Gone from my sight. That is all."

He is just as large in mast and hull and spar as when he left my side and he is just as able to bear his load of
living freight to his destined port. His diminished size is in me, not in him.

And just at that moment when someone says "There, he is gone"

There are other eyes watching him coming, and other voices ready to take up the glad shout -
"Here he comes!"

And that is dying."

~Henry Van Dyke



xoxo,
Faith

4.06.2011

Still Squeezing!

Tomorrow marks one year that my grandfather passed away...I still find myself wanting to call him and ask a question and then remember I can't...I guess this is one of those situations like Einstein was talking about when he said, "Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour. Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute. That's relativity."
I understand that quote better than ever now, It has been year and some days it feels like yesterday and some days it feels like forever ago!
So in his memory, Today I am going to post a note that I posted on my Facebook account the day he passed away last year....Wow I miss him!!

My grandfather told me around 15 years ago that when his father was sick, right before he passed away he couldnt speak...so to let him know that he loved him his daddy would squeeze his hand THREE times representing "I LOVE YOU" so from that day forward me and my grandfather have always given 3 sqeezes before we depart. If on the phone since he lives at the beach we always say "Squeeze" and he would make a squeezing noise (the noise a ratchet wrench makes) and we would disconnect (anyone who talks to me on the phone knows I never say "bye" I just hang up).

Anyway, I found a poem that he had displayed for a while in his house, (not sure if it still is or not) that I had written for him on April 4, 2001 once when he was sick before, I found it today and thought I would share it.

"Squeeze"
You are my only one
To me you set the sun.
My one and only
I can always call if I am ever lonely.
You always stand up for me
and are very generous to me with your money!
You make me laugh when you take out your teeth
You make me cry by telling me to watch my waistline not to eat!
Always stressting and Always guessing I'll do wrong
Still I am proving I am very strong.
When I heard you were sick
It made me think quick
I began to pray
and look you are still here today.
You're gonna be fine
Just keep the right mind.
I'm not behind you
I'm not in front of you
I'm right beside you.
I love you so much
I know you feel the same
I feel this love just by you saying my name.
I was truly blessed
with you in my life
I thank God every night.
Paw Paw Stop worrying we will all be alright
I'll squeeze your hand and youll squeeze mine back
Never letting go, no not a bit of slack.
~CFR 4/4/2001

I called yesterday afternoon after hearing that he was unresponisve and this was probably his last day to give him one more squeeze...my daddy held the phone up to my pawpaw's ear and I said "Hey pawpaw! It's Faith, just wanted to say I love you and Squeeze, Squeeze, Squeeze!!!" and I hung up. My family said he raised his eyebrows but I bet if they would have been watching his hand they would have seen him squeezing! When I was there last weekend I took a picture of what I felt would be one of our final squeezes (you can see it below)...and it was, so I am so glad I have this picture forever now!


SQUEEZE!!!!!!!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
xoxo,
Faith

4.01.2011

Now you go on and mind your manners boy!

This is a post I read last year from another blog and I just ran across it in my Notes section on Facebook, so I figured I would post it on here as well....after all reminders are nice every now and then fellas!  Enjoy!:)

I honestly believe the South’s male population has forgotten what a true gentleman signifies, I can’t necessarily blame them. Perhaps it’s the wave of feminism sweeping the nation that has so wrongly transformed our men. After all, why would a man open a door for a woman who constantly declares that she’s strong enough, capable enough, and independent enough to do it on her own? Or, perhaps acting in a gentleman-like manner isn’t the “masculine” way to behave in today’s midst of rebels, outlaws, and “bad boys” that women so dearly crave. So guys, believe it or not, I truly sympathize on your behalf.


However, let that not be an excuse. If you expect to find a truly charming, intelligent, and graceful southern belle to stand by your side through thick and thin, you’re going to have to step it up. It’s only fair. So with that in mind, let’s get started.

According to Southern Byways and eHow, a true southern gentleman should do as follows:

1. Open doors. This one should be a given to any man who was raised right. Yes, women are perfectly capable of opening doors for themselves, but it shows a sense of respect that every woman should appreciate.

2. Carry heavy things. Again, women are not porcelain antiques, but they should be treated as so.

3. Mean it. Unfortunate for you, women have a way of detecting insincerity from a mile away. So don’t say something unless you mean it, don’t act in one way if you don’t mean it, and surely don’t make a promise if you don’t mean it. Nobody has time for childish games.

4. Live your beliefs. Stand up for what you believe in and never back down (don’t confuse this with stubbornness). More importantly, allow your actions and way of life speak for itself. Anyone who knows you should know what you believe in, whether you’ve told them or not. Remember, actions speak so much louder than words.

5. Do unto others. After all, it’s the golden rule. If you wouldn’t wish it upon yourself, don’t dish it upon others.

6. Smile. Nothing says “hello” like those pearly whites.

7. Be responsible. You’ve outgrown those diapers, so it’s important to act like it. You shouldn’t be babysat, looked after, or watched. Just be responsible by paying your bills, doing what’s right, and getting your work done.

8. Expect resistance. Especially from any true southern belle. If it’s worth having, it won’t come easy.

9. Say “Please” and “Thank you.” Anyone with manners knows the importance of this one.

10. Compliment women. Southern gentlemen aren’t shy about flattering women, nor do they hesitate to shower them with compliments. If you think her eyes are pretty, tell her. If she doesn’t appreciate it, move on to the next one. She wasn’t worth your time anyway.

11. Respect your elders. This requires a sincere use of “Ma’am” and “Sir,” unless told otherwise.

12. Be polite. Contrary to popular belief, ladies don’t like “bad boys” who treat them badly – only insecure girls do, and it’s important to know the difference. Being anything less doesn’t get you anywhere other than someone’s bad side. ( The Southern Advantage gives an excellent example of true southern politeness: If Donald Trump was from the South, he’d say “you’re fired, but bless your heart, you’ve tried.”)

13. Offer your coat. Especially if you’re just getting to know a woman. You can offer your arm, but only after you’ve reached a truly comfortable level. This is not the time to make any moves, so don’t even think about it.

14. Pick her up. But don’t ever be too insistent, as it may come off desperate. If she wants to meet you at the restaurant on the first date, let her. She’s only ensuring her safety and should be allowed to do so. However, never fail to offer.

15. Allow her to order first. Take care of her needs first, or at least offer.

16. Dress the part. When in public, always be presentable (yes, this means you should know how to tie a tie). Women love to follow the old saying, “Look your best, but more importantly, hang your arm on someone who looks his best too.” So make it easy for her. If you need guidance, visit Southern Proper for all of your attire needs. After all, every woman loves well dressed gents.

17. Learn how to speak when with a lady. Although she may like to get down and dirty, she’s not “one of the guys,” so watch the language and treat her with respect.

18. Flirt. This may sound odd, but southern gentleman are avidly flirtatious. However this is not to encourage any vulgar or sexual comments. But let’s face it – southern gentleman flirt with most women they come across – whether the old lady down the street, the waitress at the diner, or his girlfriend/wife. They simply know how to make women feel good and enjoy doing it.

19. Remember chivalry. Contrary to popular belief, it truly does exist. Give up your seat for a woman (not just the elderly), stand when a woman enters the room, always walk on the outside of the street, always pull out her chair, and bring her flowers.

20. Always defend a lady’s honor. Never allow a man at the bar to speak to her in an inappropriate manner, and offer to walk her to her car. Remember, a woman will always admire a man who can protect her.

21. Be a man of your word. As eHow so graciously puts it, “a Southern gentleman is a man of his word. He is faithful to his wife, faithful to his church (if he is religiously inclined), unfailingly honest, and lives by a code of nobility. He is a genuine man in a world full of posers.” Thank you eHow, I couldn’t have said it better myself.

So gentlemen, do me a favor and restore the chivalry which was once so prominent across the southlands. By studying the previously listed ways of becoming a southern gentleman, acquiring the essential attire, and complimenting like crazy, you’ll be well on your way to becoming the next southern stud. But I must warn you- southern women have a sense of mystery that can make any pursuit challenging. Although well spoken and mild-mannered, their intellect and sassiness can leave you wondering. Luckily, today’s social media has the ability to alleviate some of your worrying woes as personal statuses plaster the Internet. Filled with daily activities, heartbreak stories, and personal insight, you may be able to decode her true emotions from a quick glance of her online status.
(Southern Charm 4/27/10 Blog)

xoxo,
Faith