$878,000
Labels: email 1 commentsEmail from me to domain name owner: It doesn't appear you are using this domain name. Are you willing to sell it?
Email from domain owner: Sure, it's $878,000.
My reply: Do you accept PayPal?
Email from me to domain name owner: It doesn't appear you are using this domain name. Are you willing to sell it?
Email from domain owner: Sure, it's $878,000.
My reply: Do you accept PayPal?
Posted in email
Went to KC this weekend with the kids (Andy had other things going on) and got to see Casey and family for the first time in 2 1/2 years(!). They just moved to KC and already have their house livable and unpacked. Our boys played for 6 hours non-stop and have asked to have a sleepover. Mommies drinking wine all night and kids happily playing. Yes, please!
On Saturday, Blake and I went to see new baby William. He is very cute and looks like a combination of his older brothers. The sweetest thing was seeing how Isaac and Joey interact with him. They are sweet older brothers.
On Sunday, I made lunch for my mom and I. Caprese salad, fruit salad, tuna waldorf sandwiches and strawberry soup (for real and so good) with pomegranate black tea to drink. So yummy and fun to make stuff my mom and I like.
Sure, our itinerary got revised due to Swine Flu and layoffs are heavy on our minds and the economy sucks but....
We won't remember any of it when our view is of the ocean for 7 days straight. As Andy said, it's nice to have something to look forward to.
I went skydiving- Tim McGraw, "Live Like You Were Dying"
I went rocky mountain climbing
I went two point seven seconds on a bull named Fu Man Chu
And I loved deeper
And I spoke sweeter
And I gave forgiveness I'd been denyin'
And he said some day I hope you get the chance
To live like you were dyin'
From an ebook I'm reading:
For example, on a train ride between Slovakia
and Hungary a couple of years ago, I figured out that the cost of visiting 100 countries would be roughly equal to that of buying a new S.U.V. When I saw how relatively little that was, I felt encouraged.
I gave up the hypothetical large vehicle and received the world in return.
A cliché (from French, pronounced [kli'ʃeɪ]), or cliche, is a saying, expression, or idea which has been overused to the point of losing its original meaning, especially when at some earlier time it was considered distinctively meaningful or novel, rendering it a stereotype.
I'm an unapologetic feminist. Not the kind that hates men but the kind that thinks women should have equal treatment as men. When we got married, I didn't want to be introduced as "Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Albert" but instead we were introduced as "Andy and Shannon Albert." I wasn't trying to make a statement; I just wanted to retain my own first name (at least!) and not be identified by my husband. I also took a year to get used to having a new name. In fact, my legal name is Shannon Rae Barnes Albert. I feel like getting married added on to who I already am vs. changing myself to be identified by my husband.
It is surprising, then, that I never questioned my salutation changing due to being married - especially since men don't change theirs. I'm about 30 years behind on this topic but it makes so much more sense to just call all women Ms. rather than changing from Miss to Mrs. due to marriage. Why do we identify women according to this anyway? It makes no sense. I will address Christmas cards to other women without the Miss or Mrs. from now on and would request that letters written to me do the same.
Hat tip to Blake for asking me about this. Same boy who asked me "can men be doctors or just women?" If male Republican feminists exist (surely they do), he's well on is way to joining them.
Posted in Blake, feminism, marriage, Shannon