"Lolcat" of the Week


I had a hard time finding a good Lolcat for this week because they've all been so funny lately, but when I saw this one, I just knew. It just made me laugh. Yeah, okay, so it's not a cat. Who cares. It's hilarious. :D

Have a great week, everyone!

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PSA: Don't Text and Drive

The following video is graphic and may be too disturbing for you to watch, but I want you to watch it anyways -- especially if you or someone you know has ever sent text messages while driving.


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All content on this site is the sole property of Ana Cristina Simon, unless otherwise stated, and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Is it possible to be in love with a song?

The boyf got me hooked on this new band recently. They're called Phoenix. They're French but they can totally pass as American, save for the faint trace of an accent in the lead singer's voice. I was hooked on the very first listen, especially to the song "Lisztomania."

Is it possible to be in love with a song?



Yes, I do think it is... :-D

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All content on this site is the sole property of Ana Cristina Simon, unless otherwise stated, and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Lolcat of the Week


Bwahahaha... I'm still laughing at this week's Lolcat! Which is a good thing, because I'll need all the cheering up I can get this week. You see, today marks the official start of the 2009-2010 school year. Which ends on June 9th. And yes, I am counting down the days until my next summer vacation already. *sob*

Have a great week, everyone! *tearful smile*

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All content on this site is the sole property of Ana Cristina Simon, unless otherwise stated, and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

How to write a letter

I used to have a pen-pal, a girl I met right after I broke up with my first serious boyfriend. It was a very sad time for me -- I had to get used to something that had become foreign to me: being alone. My pen-pal, who I'll call Irene, was a great help during that time. Her letters would brighten up my days and I loved learning about her likes and dislikes, what life was like in her country (she lived in Central America). I loved writing back to her, too, filling her in on the intricacies of my life.

The years rolled on and Irene and I stopped writing, suddenly too busy with school and work to take the time to continue writing. Now we e-mail from time to time, but you know, it just isn't the same.

There is nothing like receiving a letter. I'm always after my boyf to write me one, and he never does. *tear* I think he feels intimidated, which is silly. I would love anything he set down on paper and treasure it always. But I am content with receiving cards from him, hoping against hope that one day he'll give in and set pen to paper.

We all know getting bills in the post is no fun -- my heart leaps every time I get the rare handwritten letter. It's been years, I think, since I received my last. Why have we stopped? Is it simply the advent of e-mail and Facebook and Twitter? Or is it something else?

In asking myself these questions, I recall one of my favorite pieces of Garrison Keillor's, "How to write a letter." If you've never read it before, you're in for a treat:

How to write a letter

by Garrison Keillor (written for Corrine Guntzel)


We shy persons need to write a letter now and then, or else we'll dry up and blow away. It's true. And I speak as one who loves to reach for the phone, dial the number, and talk. I say, "Big Bopper here - what's shakin', babes?" The telephone is to shyness what Hawaii is to February, it's a way out of the woods, and yet: a letter is better.

Such a sweet gift - a piece of handmade writing, in an envelope that is not a bill, sitting in our friend's path when she trudges home from a long day spent among wahoos and savages, a day our words will help repair. They don't need to be immortal, just sincere. She can read them twice and again tomorrow: You're someone I care about, Corrine, and think of often and every time I do you make me smile.

We need to write, otherwise nobody will know who we are. They will have only a vague impression of us as A Nice Person, because, frankly, we don't shine at conversation, we lack the confidence to thrust our faces forward and say, "Hi! I'm Heather Hooten; let me tell you about my week." Mostly we say "Uh-huh" and "Oh, really." People smile and look over our shoulder, looking for someone else to meet.

So a shy person sits down and writes a letter. To be known by another person - to meet and talk freely on the page - to be close despite distance. To escape from anonymity and be our own sweet selves and express the music of our souls.

Same thing that moves a giant rock star to sing his heart out in front of 123,000 people moves us to take a ballpoint in hand and write a few lines to our dear Aunt Eleanor. We want to be known. We want her to know that we have fallen in love, that we quit our job, that we're moving to New York, and we want to say a few things that might not get said in casual conversation: Thank you for what you've meant to me, I'm very happy right now.

The first step in writing letters is to get over the guilt of not writing. You don't "owe" anybody a letter. Letters are a gift. The burning shame you feel when you see unanswered mail makes it harder to pick up a pen and makes for a cheerless letter when you finally do. I feel bad about not writing, but I've been so busy, etc. Skip this. Few letters are obligatory, and they are Thanks for the wonderful gift and I am terribly sorry to hear about George's death and Yes, you're welcome to stay with us next month, and not many more than that. Write those promptly if you want to keep your friends. Don't worry about the others, except love letters, of course. When your true love writes, Dear Light of My Life, Joy of My Heart, O Lovely Pulsating Core of My Sensate Life, some response is called for.

Some of the best letters are tossed off in a burst of inspiration, so keep your writing stuff in one place where you can sit down for a few minutes and (Dear Roy, I am in the middle of a book entitled We Are Still Married but thought I'd drop you a line. Hi to your sweetie, too) dash off a note to a pal. Envelopes, stamps, address book, everything in a drawer so you can write fast when the pen is hot.

A blank white eight-by-eleven sheet can look as big as Montana if the pen's not so hot - try a smaller page and write boldly. Or use a note card with a piece of fine art on the front; if your letter ain't good, at least they get the Matisse. Get a pen that makes a sensuous line, get a comfortable typewriter, a friendly word processor - whichever feels easy to the hand.

Sit for a few minutes with the blank sheet in front of you, and meditate on the person you will write to, let your friend come to mind until you can almost see her or him in the room with you. Remember the last time you saw each other and how your friend looked and what you said and what perhaps was unsaid between you, and when your friend becomes real to you, start to write.

Write the salutation - Dear You - and take a deep breath and plunge in. A simple declarative sentence will do, followed by another and another and another. Tell us what you're doing and tell it like you were talking to us. Don't think about grammar, don't think about lit'ry style, don't try to write dramatically, just give us your news. Where did you go, who did you see, what did they say, what do you think?

If you don't know where to begin, start with the present moment: I'm sitting at the kitchen table on a rainy Saturday morning. Everyone is gone and the house is quiet. Let your simple description of the present moment lead to something else, let the letter drift gently along.

The toughest letter to crank out is one that is meant to impress, as we all know from writing job applications; if it's hard work to slip off a letter to a friend, maybe you're trying too hard to be terrific. A letter is only a report to someone who already likes you for reasons other than your brilliance. Take it easy.

Don't worry about form. It's not a term paper. When you come to the end of one episode, just start a new paragraph. You can go from a few lines about the sad state of pro football to your fond memories of Mexico to your cat's urinary tract infection to a few thoughts on personal indebtedness and on to the kitchen sink and what's in it. The more you write, the easier it gets, and when you have a True True Friend to write to, a compadre, a soul sibling, then it's like driving a car down a country road, you just get behind the keyboard and press on the gas.

Don't tear up the page and start over when you write a bad line - try to write your way out of it. Make mistakes and plunge on. Let the letter cook along and let yourself be bold. Outrage, confusion, love - whatever is in your mind, let it find a way on to the page. Writing is a means of discovery, always, and when you come to the end and write Yours ever or Hugs and kisses, you'll know something you didn't when you wrote Dear Pal.

Probably your friend will put your letter away, and it'll be read again a few years from now - and it will improve with age. And forty years from now, your friend's grandkids will dig it out of the attic and read it, a sweet and precious relic of the ancient eighties that gives them a sudden clear glimpse of you and her and the world we old-timers knew. You will then have created an object of art. Your simple lines about where you went, who you saw, what they said, will speak to those children and they will feel in their hearts the humanity of our times.

You can't pick up a phone and call the future and tell them about our times. You have to pick up a piece of paper.

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Lolcat of the Week


What is it with cats and tearing up toilet paper? For real. My cat gets into these fits sometimes and tears our toilet paper to shreds. And of course when I scold him for being such a wittle bad kitty, he looks at me with exactly that expression you see above. *shakes head* Ah, cats...

Have a great week, everyone! :-)

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All content on this site is the sole property of Ana Cristina Simon, unless otherwise stated, and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Wanted: Danger Magnet #2


I never thought I’d see the day when I’d be looking for a bloggy partner in crime, but here I am, meekly asking for that very thing.

Let me give you some background in case you are just joining this here blog: I run another blog other than this one, The Danger Magnet. It's a Twilight fan-site. The Danger Magnet is currently being written single-handedly by one little lady, and that little lady is YOURS TRULY. But YOURS TRULY also happens to run three blogs other than this one, not to mention a column for Examiner.com, so YOURS TRULY is getting overwhelmed. Oh, and did I mention YOURS TRULY also happens to be a full-time English teacher whose school year is starting again in just 2 weeks, plus she has a master’s thesis she still needs to write, plus-plus she has a loving boyf whom she routinely neglects for fictional characters?

I think you can see where I’m coming from…

So this is what I need: I need another blogger to step in and help me publish regular posts on this blog. I will continue to host weekly discussions on the books, but I would love someone to publish news-related (NON-PAPARAZZI!) items. I used to publish more news-related stuff before Real Life stepped in, and I miss being up-to-date with the amazing likes of TwiCrack Addict, Twilight Moonlighter, and Eyes of Amber. The post will be temporary (a few months) unless you wow me with your extraordinary writing prowess, at which point I might be persuaded to make you a permanent addition.

You still interested? Here are the requirements:

  1. You must have a firm grip on modern English conventions (good writing skills required!).
  2. You must have read all four books in the Twilight Saga (yes, there will be a quiz ;p).
  3. You must love all things Twilight-related (duh).
  4. You must be willing to publish at least 3-5 separate items a week (more if you like, of course!).
  5. You must be willing to do all the above for free.

If you think you meet all 5 requirements and you are crazy willing to help me out and co-write this blog, e-mail me at ASimon78@aol.com with a brief description as to why you think you should be considered for the post. Of course, you should familiarize yourself with this site and its content before applying. I will be accepting submissions until August 31st, at which point hopefully I will have made my final decision.

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All content on this site is the sole property of Ana Cristina Simon, unless otherwise stated, and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.