Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog
Drop whatever you’re doing and go watch it now. I mean it, now. Go. What are you waiting for?
Drop whatever you’re doing and go watch it now. I mean it, now. Go. What are you waiting for?
This week involved a lot of driving: to and from basketball camp every day, to the dentist, grocery shopping, etc. I love my “new” minivan, but I’m hoping not to spend as much time in it next week! That hope is in vain, though, since VBS starts Monday.
I’m sitting in a quiet house right now. Kevin and all three boys are at archery, and Natalie is at a slumber party. Now that Josiah has decided to take archery, too, I will have every Thursday evening all by my lonesome. Woot!
Kevin and the boys are going camping tomorrow. After Nan’s last day of basketball camp tomorrow, she and I will have a girls’ night and watch 27 Dresses. Saturday, we will head to the lake for Noah’s birthday celebration. Monday, VBS starts…. Things don’t look to slow down any time soon. Sigh.
~ How to Recognize a Blond Antelope. Hat tip: Angela Hunt.
~ For all of you who have sons who have ever asked: What Happens When You Go Number Two in Space. Hat tip: Challies.
~ You know how I’ve been raving about Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series? I’m reading her other novel, The Host, right now – and it’s shaping up to be a great read, too. You can enter to win an entire Stephenie Meyer library at Maw Books Blog.
~ A soldier finds a way to stay sane in Iraq.
~ Amazing pictures of ovulation. Hat tip: A Quiet Simple Life.
~ Don’t forget to enter my Gone giveaway.
~ Speaking of giveaways, Booking Mama is giving away a copy of The Wednesday Sisters by Meg Waite Clayton.
~ Video interview with Neil Gaiman, author of Neverwhere, Coraline, and Anansi Boys.
Here’s what I’ve been blogging at Books and Movies this week:
~ Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull – the kids and I went to see it over the weekend.
~ I reviewed Life Studies: Stories by Susan Vreeland.
So, last week we bought a “new” (to us) mini-van. Today, we made an offer on a house. Yes, life has been interesting here at the Mommy Brain household. The offer is, of course, contingent on selling our home. We haven’t heard back from the sellers yet, so we’re still waiting, fingers crossed.
It has been a dream to move into a bigger house for a while now. Our home is fairly small, and the bigger the kids get, the smaller it seems. Not to mention only having one bathroom, and a girl about to turn twelve… The house we put an offer on has four bedrooms, 2.5 baths (about which Natalie exclaimed, “Half our family could be going at the same time!”), central AC, large living room, large family room downstairs, laundry on the main floor, and a fully remodeled kitchen with gorgeous hickory cabinets. I loved it the first time I saw it, but I’m trying not to get my heart set on it. A log of hoop-jumping must occur before it could be ours. Prayers would be appreciated – especially for our house to sell quickly.
I need to get some deep-cleaning done – which doesn’t happen very often during our homeschool year – but won’t be able to do much this weekend. My nephews, Peter and Andrew, are coming in the morning to spend the weekend. It has been our pleasure to have the boys for at least one weekend a year while Marni and Hans have some much-needed alone-time. This weekend is especially meaningful, since it will be the last time we will have them before Marni and Hans move to St. Louis this summer. Sunday afternoon, we will celebrate Andrew’s 4th birthday at Mom and Dad’s house. If I have any energy left at all, I’m planning to take the kids to see Prince Caspian on Monday afternoon; it actually came to our little rural theater the first weekend it opened! Anyone else planning to see it this weekend?
The oldest three kids have started archery on Thursday nights. Their Tae Kwon Do instructor offers archery once a week after junior class during the summer. Tonight was their first class, and they came home full of excitement – and an argument about whether Legolas or Robin Hood would win an archery competition.
~ I received another freelancing assignment – this one a (slightly) paid blogging gig at Today.com. My blog there is called Books and Movies – head on over if you feel like it. You’ll see some repeat posts about books, but most of the posts there will be strictly entertainment based, and I am planning to liveblog Lost tonight. (Yes, I know the title of this post is “Links for Friday,” but I have more time to post in the evenings, and once I have it written, I might as well publish it for all of you night owls out there, right?) The paid part of this assignment is partially based on traffic, so any clicks or links would be highly appreciated – and I promise not to mention it here too often, for fear of self-advertising.
~ Robin at MartinZoo posted this adorable video. See if you can get “Hey, Jude” out of your head after watching it.
~ This comic could easily happen at our house.
~ Armchair Commentary has posted the Top 5 Celebrity Gap Commercials. I never knew that was Claire Danes!
~ Randy Alcorn is giving away three copies of his new novel Deception. I haven’t read it yet, but I loved Deadline and Dominion – the first two books in the series.
~ Kamp Krusty has a unique idea to fix the environment.
~ I’ve probably posted this before, but you have to check out the Literature Map. Enter the name of a favorite author, and up will pop a map of other author’s names. The closer to your author, the more they are similar. Pretty cool.
Well, that’s all for now. Enjoy your weekend!
It’s been one of those kind of weeks: raging hormones, a squabble with the neighbor, squabbles with my husband, sad news from a friend. Not the kind of week I’d like to repeat anytime soon. So, instead of dwelling on it, I’ll get right to the links.
~ Anyone else looking forward to Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull? I can’t wait – May 22nd. To tide you over, here’s an interview about Indy 4 with Harrison Ford and an interview with George Lucas and Steven Spielberg.
~ Speaking of movies, Ben Stein’s Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed is already showing in theaters. I have not seen it yet, but we plan to watch it on DVD. I read a terrific editorial by Brent Bozell III – a man who confessed he didn’t want to even see the movie. He writes not only about the film, but about the backlash from the atheists Mr. Stein interviewed in the film. Here’s a snippet to grab your attention:
“I went into the screening bored. I came out of it stunned.
Ben Stein’s extraordinary presentation documents how the worlds of science and academia not only crush debate on the origins of life, but also crush the careers of professors who dare to question the Darwinian hypothesis of evolution and natural selection….
It’s understood that God had nothing to do with the origins of life on Earth. What, then, is the alternate explanation? Stein asks these experts, and their very serious answers are priceless. One theorizes that life began somehow on the backs of crystals. Another states electric sparks from a lightning storm created organic matter (out of nothing). Another declares that life was brought to Earth by aliens. Anything but God….
Everyone should take the opportunity to see “Expelled” — if nothing else, as a bracing antidote to the atheism-friendly culture of PC liberalism. But it’s far more than that. It’s a spotlight on the arrogance of this movement and its leaders, a spotlight on the choking intolerance of academia, and a spotlight on the ignorance of so many who say so much, yet know so very little.”
~ Do you have an opinion on the Harry Potter copyright lawsuit?
~ Anyone who has taken small children out to eat at a restaurant will appreciate this Baby Blues comic.
~ It appears that memoirists aren’t the only authors who fib. Travel authors apparently write about places they’ve never even visited.
~ Natalie and I just finished reading The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick – and we both found it delightful. This web site has some videos of the item that helped to inspire Selznick’s story. (If you haven’t read it yet and plan to, you might want to wait to check this web site as it will include a slight spoiler.)
~ The kids and I came across this wonderful site during our studies of the water cycle. Be sure to click on gallery to see photos taken with a special snowflake photomicroscope.
~ Moomin Light has an interesting and disturbing post about the practice of airbrushing photos of celebrities. Be sure and check out the link to examples from a company who does this work. The celebrities who are gorgeous enough without the touch-ups end up looking like mannequins.
That’s all for this week. Here’s to a weekend that’s better than the week was.
It seems spring has finally sprung in our neck of the woods. The snow is all gone, and we’ve had some sunny days. Of course, on Sunday when I was overly optimistic and took the boys to the skate park, I froze. The sun was out, but the breeze was still frigid. A few more weeks, though, and we should be able to pack away the sweatshirts and bring out the t-shirts.
I’ve had more time to read this week, since my freelancing has dried up for a few months (unless I pick up another client, of course). Anna Karenina has finally grabbed me – it sure took awhile! I also finished listening to the audiobook of Blasphemy by Douglas Preston. It was a good sci-fi thriller, but it was sure apparent that he has a very low opinion of Christians. Or maybe just Christians in the media. Sadly enough, the horrible things that the televangelist and other “Christian” characters do in the book seem altogether plausible given the state of the church, which is terrible to admit, but true.
I started listening to Fragile Things by Neil Gaiman. Usually, I do not like it when authors read their own books on audio. I put up with Frank Peretti’s reading of Monster, although it was extremely exaggerated; I could not listen to Elizabeth Berg read her Dream While You’re Feeling Blue. If you’re an author, you should never read your own book aloud unless you have been assured repeatedly (by people not on your payroll) that you are a terrific read-aloud-er; just don’t do it. Gaiman, on the other hand, is a wonderful reader. You can tell that he loves words; he seems to taste each one as he speaks it. I read his Coraline aloud to the kids (we all loved it) and I tried to read American Gods, but couldn’t get past the graphic nature of it. Michelle read Ananzi Boys, though, and assured me it was completely different, so I guess he’s one of those authors who writes a completely different book each time. Fragile Things is a collection of short stories and poems, and so far I’m enjoying it very much. Anyone else read any of his work?
~ Hey, it’s not a rumor! The New Kids on the Block are reuniting for a CD and a tour. The music of my high school years.
~ Poetry180 is a web site sponsored by the Library of Congress. It contains a list of 180 poems – one for each day of a school year. The poems are meant for high schoolers, and I haven’t read them all, so definitely pre-read before sending your students there.
~ This Grand Avenue comic should give fans of math and art alike a few chuckles.
~ The Telegraph has an interview with author Jodi Picoult.
~ Lawanda is celebrating her 3rd Blogoversary – head over, congratulate her, and enter to win a free book.
I am nobody.
I hide in myself,
Velvet-lined
Against the cold stares
Of the world.I am nobody.
I keep away from the hatred,
Stone-clad
Against those who mock
And deride.I am nobody.
I remain in darkness,
Wool-insulated
Against the pain
Of their contempt.But when I am asleep
I am somebody.
Stripped naked
Of all the trappings of myself.
An empress of lands of plenty,
With sackfuls of love, respect
And self-worth.So please,
Let me sleep.Author’s Note: I wrote this poem in empathy with anyone who suffers at the eyes of others whether disabled, depressed or just a bit sad. My nights are filled with such joy travelling the worlds beyond wakefulness and I wish such release for everyone who needs it.
~ The above poem was written by this amazing 10-year-old girl who has cerebral palsy. My mom e-mailed about her after she saw her story on ABC News. Be sure to click on the link to read her essay that won the Times Educational Supplement Write Away Competition in Jan. 2006. She’s truly remarkable.
People in Glass Houses
I build my house of shining glass
of crystal
prisms
light, clear,
delicate.
The wind blows
Sets my rooms to singing.
The sun’s bright rays
are not held back
but pour
their radiance through the rooms
in sparkles of delight.And what, you ask, of rain
that leaves blurred muddy streaks
across translucent purity?
What, you ask,
of the throwers of stones?Glass shatters,
breaks,
sharp fragments pierce my flesh,
darken with blood.
The wind tinkles brittle splinters
of shivered crystal.
The stones crash through.But never mind.
My house
My lovely shining
fragile broken house
is filled with flowers
and founded on a rock.~ from The Ordering of Love: The New and Collected Poems of Madeleine L’Engle
How’s your April going so far? Did anyone prank you on the first?
We started into our normal week on Tuesday after a long weekend of visiting with family, and it was hard. We had such a great time visiting, but it made for a very busy few days and none of us were ready to jump into school on Tuesday morning. It didn’t help that the rest of the neighborhood kids were all out playing, since this was the public school system’s Spring Break.
It also didn’t help things when I realized I’ve been too lax about doing history this year and we won’t finish by June, and will be continuing with history through the summer if we want to finish The Story of the World II: The Middle Ages in time to start book 3 in September. Sigh. Oh, well, at least we’ve been enjoying what we have learned and the kids seem to be retaining names and people groups well, if not exact dates.
After last weekend, I’m really craving a few days of down time, but I won’t be getting it. Saturday, Noah and Natalie will go through promotion at Tae Kwon Do, testing for their green belts. Sunday, I hope to take the kids to see Nim’s Island, which is playing in our little one-screen theater.
I’ve got lots of links for you this week, and I’ll start off with the poetry-related in honor of National Poetry Month:
~ The Telegraph ran a series called English Poetry Masters, with articles on Chaucer, Shelley, Christina Rosetti, Milton, and Robert Browning. Each article also includes a sample poem.
~ Sherry at Semicolon linked to The English Room’s 30 Days of Poetry. This is a great way to get your middle-grade kids writing poetry. You might even want to write along with them.
Now, on to the book-related:
~ The Guardian has an interview with Markus Zusak, author of The Book Thief (which I loved).
~ Literary Feline is having a book giveaway in honor of Give a Friend a Book Week.
~ I’m a little behind the times, but I guess the latest craze in evangelical circles is a book called The Shack by William P. Young. I have not read the book, and so will not give an opinion, but I encourage you to read this review by Tim Challies. If you’d like, you can also check out this You Tube video from a Mark Driscoll sermon.
Now, for some opinion pieces:
~ It’s a Bratz Country, by Rod Dreher of Crunchy Con. Hat tip: Shannon at Rocks in My Dryer. Here’s a quote to peak your interest:
You will hear from very few people that the toxic culture in which we’re raising our children of all races is destroying them. The facts from the new study are pretty shocking for all Americans. What is it going to take for adults to realize how badly we are failing the younger generations? We’re going to keep on and keep on sexualizing little girls, acculturating them to the idea that they are sex objects. We are not, apparently, going to raise any effective objection to the increased sexualization of our culture by taking concrete and proactive measures in our own families, churches and communities to be countercultural in this regard. We’re simply going to assume there’s nothing we can do, or even blame the Other (it’s the right-wingers who fight comprehensive sex ed; it’s the left-wingers who are turning the culture trashy) instead of asking ourselves what we can and should do to build up a healthy and morally sane self-image in girls and boys.
~ The Nice Squad: Would you dare to say turn the music down?
I use Debrett’s Guide To Etiquette as my bible, and am lucky enough to know gentlemen who make me swoon by rushing ahead to open a door for me, or by insisting they take the correct side of the pavement. I’m clearly living in Brief Encounter, aren’t I?
So you can imagine how well it goes down when I get on a bus and an MP3 player mobile phone is tinnily blaring out some R&B nonsense about gold-plated Bentleys, b*tches and bling to the annoyance of everyone else.
On to politics:
~ Senior Democrats mull Al Gore’s nomination. Wouldn’t that make things interesting? (Shudder)
Some links to make you laugh:
~ Cathy Thorne who draws the wonderful Everyday People comics has a new website. Here’s one my favorites.
~ Another great edition of Zits.
~ This reminds me of how Natalie remembered acute, right, and obtuse angles.
~ I Am Woman – Size 36 D from Melanie at The Refrigerator Door.
~ Hugh Laurie from House singing his original song, America.
~ The Ultimate Cubicle Prank – Hat Tip: Don’t Try This At Home.
That list should keep you busy! Have a great weekend.
When Katy at Fallible announced that she now had an agent to help guide her literary career, I was so very happy for her. I also started reading her agent’s blog. She gives great writing advice (like this), and she’s also hosting The Yo-Dawg-Show-Me-What-You-Got Double Decker CHALLENGE. There are two parts to the competition: submit the first line of a novel – a first line that will make her want to keep reading; second, after she chooses the winning first line, submit the first 300 words to go with the winning first line. If you’re a writer, the prize is something all unpublished writers pine after, so please click over and check out all the details. The deadline for the first phase is Saturday at midnight her time, so don’t wait.
Now, onto a totally different and completely unrelated topic: colonoscopies. Yes, I know, not what you expect from my blog. However, I read this funny and important column by Dave Barry about hist first colonoscopy – and why, after avoiding it for 10 years, he finally had it done.
OK. You turned 50. You know you’re supposed to get a colonoscopy. But you haven’t. Here are your reasons:
1. You’ve been busy.
2. You don’t have a history of cancer in your family.
3. You haven’t noticed any problems.
4. You don’t want a doctor to stick a tube 17,000 feet up your butt.
Let’s examine these reasons one at a time. No, wait, let’s not. Because you and I both know that the only real reason is No. 4. This is natural. The idea of having another human, even a medical human, becoming deeply involved in what is technically known as your ”behindular zone” gives you the creeping willies.
Now that I’ve shown you how humorous even this topic can be, click over and read the column. And, if you’re over fifty and have yet to be screened (yes, Dad, I mean you), make an appointment.
And, since it’s Good Friday, I leave you with this:
I read of Christ crucified,
the only begotten Son
sacrificed to flesh and time
and all our woe. He died
and rose, but who does not tremble
for His pain, His loneliness,
and the darkness of the sixth hour?
Unless we grieve like Mary
at His grave, giving Him up
as lost, no Easter morning comes.~from The Way of Pain, by Wendell Berry
It’s February. Does anyone else get the mid-winter blahs in February? It always seems to hit me this time of year. I’m sick of winter, I want a break from homeschooling but there isn’t one in sight until Easter week, and the kids are squirrely. We’re done with the it’s-too-cold-to-play-outside days, done (for now) with the snowing-four-to-seven-inches-at-a-time days, and we’re into the it’s-above-freezing-and-the-piles-of-snow-are-melting-and-making-everything-soggy days. The kids play outside, and then come in completely soaked through. They saw the sun shining yesterday and Josiah yelled, “Spring is here!” I hated to burst his bubble, the poor guy.
The great thing is that I know the solution for the mid-winter blahs. It’s something Kevin and I do every year around this time – we head off to the nearest big city (that would be Spokane) for a weekend without our four wonderful children. That’s what’s happening next weekend, and I am SO ready! The cool thing is, I get an extra day of grown-up time this year. Kevin suggested that Michelle and I take next Thursday off, leave the kids with him and Don (they both work out of the home) and head to Spokane. We’ll be eating out, going to the movies, spending (too much) money at Barnes & Noble, and staying over in a hotel. All of that time, completely kid-free! Then Kevin will drop the boys off at her house Friday morning, drop Nan off at her best friend’s house, and come down to join me for the rest of the weekend. Of course, Michelle may need another day of rest and pampering after having my boys for the rest of the weekend, but we will be returning the favor and keeping their boys for a weekend so they can get away very soon.
So, what am I doing while I’m waiting impatiently for some Mommy time? Reading good books:

The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop by Lewis Buzbee
(Yes, I’m supposed to be reading Anna Karenina for the Winter Reading Challenge, but this little gem arrived on Friday, and after Becky Sharpe, I just couldn’t pick up another long novel with a main character who is a ninny.)
I’m also watching good movies, like this one:
Tomorrow is our Friday play date. (I’m writing this Thursday night.) It’s Michelle’s week to host, and I am keeping my fingers crossed that it will go better than the last two times we had it there. My boys were atrocious! Not to her boys, just to each other. They keep the fighting in the family, at least. But I don’t want her to be secretly wishing she hadn’t agreed to keep them next weekend! I love my kids, but every year around this time, they absolutely drive me nuts.
We thought maybe the kids would have a Tae Kwon Do promotion on Saturday, but our month off due to sickness has put them a little behind. There’s another promotion the first Saturday in March, and they should be ready for that one. Since they aren’t promoting, I am planning to take them to Spokane to see The Spiderwick Chronicles movie. They have been warned that their behavior can lose them this privilege, however. I’m sure Noah will be at his best, since the Spiderwick books are his all-time favorites. He has been waiting and waiting to see this movie. If Jonathan and Josiah continue behaving the way they did tonight at bedtime, it may be just Natalie, Noah, and I!
Well, I’ve rambled on long enough, so here are the links I’ve been saving to share:
~ If you’ve ever wondered what Sawyer would nickname you if you were one of the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815, wonder no longer. Mine is “Stubby.” Be sure to come back and tell me yours!
~ Every mom will be able to relate to this Baby Blues comic.
~ Check out the trailer for Indianan Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Can’t wait for this one!
~ Carol at Magistramater wrote a wonderful post on nurturing our appetite for beauty, goodness, and truth. After you read it, be sure to click on through to the Wendell Berry interview she links – it’s brilliant.
Have a great weekend!
Thank you for all of your prayers and kind thoughts about my previous post. Please continue to pray.
We have some fun things planned for the weekend. Tomorrow is our day to host the Friday play date with Michelle and her boys. Then in the evening, after the kiddos are safely tucked away in bed, Kevin will head to her house to play Game Cube with Don, and Michelle will come over here to watch Becoming Jane. One of the benefits of getting review copies of movies is that they come before the release date! Expect a review sometime this weekend.
Saturday, the kids and I will be attending the Missoula Children’s Theater production of The Little Mermaid. Natalie auditioned Monday, but didn’t get a part.
She has a really good attitude about it, though, and wants to try again next year.
Other than that, I have some writing to do – and only 132 pages left in Vanity Fair. I’ll probably finish it this weekend. It’s good, but boy, is it long!
Here are the links I’ve been saving to share with you all:
~ Lawanda posted this funny video about political change.
~ Kris posted about this very helpful site: GetHuman. It’s a database of companies’ phone numbers – and instructions on how to talk to a real live human!
~ Katy at Fallible posted one of the funniest YouTube videos ever. While you’re there, be sure and congratulate her on her big news!
~ Remember all those “stupid American” bits on Jay Leno and YouTube? Well, it turns out we’re not the only ones. According to this news article, one quarter of Brits think that Winston Churchill was a myth. Not only that, but a whole bunch (58%) of them think Sherlock Holmes was real, while nearly half believe Richard the Lionhearted was just a fairy tale.
~ Lastly, head on over to 5 Minutes for Mom to enter their Oreck XL Ultra giveaway.
Well, that’s all. Have a great weekend!
It’s been a week, that’s all I have to say. We started back to school this week, and, boy, did I feel the three weeks off. Plus, Kevin is mostly working from home now, and with our little house and my freaking out if our schedule gets interrupted – well, let’s just say we all have some adjusting to do. Here are a few highlights:
Snow, snow, and more snow. I don’t know how many inches we have had since Thanksgiving, but I am praying for an early spring. The extended forecast for the next ten days? Snow, snow, snow showers, snow – with a few cloudy days thrown in for good measure. This is the time of year I always start to feel like a grouch about the weather.
Abcess on a tonsil. No, not mine – I don’t have any tonsils anymore. Kevin seemed to be getting over the flu just fine, until his right tonsil swelled up so big that it pushed his uvula (the little dangly thing in the middle) out of position and nearly closed his throat off. A shot of steroids and mega-antibiotics reduced the swelling enough that the doctor could get in there and lance and drain it. Yes, this involved a shot of novicaine into his tonsil, which was then sliced into, spread open, and sucked out. Too much information? Sorry. He was a drugged up sleepy-head for a day or two, and will be on antibiotics for a while, but all is healing nicely.
I Am Legend. Dad and I went and saw this Sunday evening. Quick review: much scarier than I expected; Will Smith is fantastic; surprisingly strong message about God’s sovereignty. If you’re squeamish, skip it; if you’re not and you like sci-fi, see it.
Cable hook-up. After being frustrated that our antenna doesn’t work when it’s snowing, we decided to hook up very basic cable. And I mean basic: NBC, CBS, ABC, PBS, FOX, TBS, The Weather Channel, C-Span – and a couple of religious stations with very big-haired people asking for money. But, I can watch my football games – and Lost returns on the 31st! All this for around $15 a month – and no contract, unlike satellite. The kids are happy to be able to watch Cyberchase and Zoom on PBS again.
Did I mention the SNOW?
Well, enough complaining – I have a bunch of links to share. Some will educate, some will make you laugh, all are guaranteed to be a worthy waste of time.
~ Karen Edmisten on Blogging, breaks, and mother guilt.
~ Albert Mohler on The Reading of Books. (I owe someone a hat tip for this, but can’t remember where I saw it.)
~ Why don’t you use the little wench? – hilarious column on the misuse of homophones.
~ For Natalie’s writing assignment this week, she wrote a persuasive essay on why everyone should read the Series of Unfortunate Events books by Lemony Snicket.
~ What do I do now? – great video at Lovin’ Life.
~ Moomin Light on watching Pride and Prejudice (with Colin Firth, duh) for the first time.
~ Beautiful photos of libraries around the world – Hat tip: Sherry at Semicolon.
~ Panoramic views of selected rooms in The Louvre – be sure and look up at the ceilings!
~ Column on why the WGA strike is dragging on.
Lastly, I discovered that this week was De-Lurking week in the blogging world. What does that mean? Well, a lurker is someone who reads a blog, but doesn’t comment. I would love to hear from any and all of my readers – if you’ve never commented before, just click on Comment and say “hi.” Have a great weekend!