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As I've kind of mentioned in a round-about way, Texas Seeestor is getting married soon! Next Saturday, to be precise. As of this time next week, we'll all be together in Texas.
Texas Seestor and her fiance Trainwreck, asked me to sing at the wedding ceremony. Since I didn't have any wedding music in my repertoire, so to speak, they chose the song upon the advice of their accompaniest, and they mailed me the sheet music.
When I received it, I was relieved to see that the highest note is a D. Which, as an alto, is in a semi-comfortable spot when I'm singing in a choir. As a soloist, well, it takes a little more work to make it totally comfortable. Luckily, it is also the spot in the song where I am supposed to sing the loudest.
Anyway, for the first couple of months, I had No Idea whatsoever what the song sounded like. This is the disadvantage of not playing piano.
Finally, I found someone to play it for me and Lo and Behold! it is the same tune as "The Water is Wide." I've always loved that song. I was introduced to it in choir in middle- or high-school. It was probably middle-school. And am fond of the version that James Taylor has done at the end of one of his albums.
So, I've been practicing, so that I can hit that D comfortably. Not to mention just getting entirely comfortable with the song.
And last night, HB had to work late, so I figured it was a perfect chance to practice before I ate supper (after eating I find it is trickier to keep my throat clear enough to sing).
Now, the Girlie-girl was a bit anxious, I am guessing, that HB wasn't home. She might've also been concerned that I wasn't On the Couch like I was Supposed To Be at this hour of the night so that I could Pet Her.
So, I reminded her that the On the Couch comes after supper, remember, Girlie-girl?
First, she kept fussing around on the floor while I sang meowing &/or rolling on her back, cleaning etc.
Finally, she jumped up on the chair where I had my sheet music sitting
and then jumped up on top of the music!
D: hurmpf. Well, I guess I can't exactly sing now, can I?
GG: No, now you HAVE to pay attention to me.
D: Dork. Fine, I'll just take your picture.
GG: *grumble, grumble* not the dang camera again.
D: Well, I can't help it. You just do the silliest things.
GG: Now. If I. Can. Just. Get. Comfortable...
So, you don't think she was trying to say something about the quality of my singing do you?
I took both pictures last night with Dee-Dee.
Posted by danielle at 11:05 AM | Comments (9) | TrackBack
The first weekend I arrived, one of our goals was to get my home office space set up so that I would have a nice place to write my thesis.
It was a little daunting from the hallway.

There were so many boxes, and so many heavy boxes of books...

...boxes that I couldn't even begin to lift! And when I looked at it during the first two days, I felt a sense of panic. You know, the panic that isn't so strong that you feel sick to your stomach, but the panic that makes you breathe a little faster and makes your mind run faster, and well, maybe makes you feel a weeee bit queasy.

But HB reassured me that he could move the heavy boxes. And that above all I was "NOT to panic."
He knows me so well.
So, we moved the boxes into the hall. That would be the royal we, meaning he. And we pushed my existing furniture around in the room to get it into place. That would be the not so royal we, meaning, well, meaning the two of us.
After taking multiple measurements of the wall nearest the door, the one that doesn't have the closet, we headed off to attempt to buy bookcases.
You see, while I had a bookcase that used to be in my office, there were a couple of problems with it.
It was
A) overflowing with books - which meant there was No Room for my textbooks and binders that I'd had at my school office.
B) making me feel claustrophobic due to the height of it in the room.
Now, I may not be into feng shui, or whatever that stuff is, but I do know when I feel like my air supply is being cut off. And that is what used to happen when I would go into my old home office for any length of time.
We went to both Home Deeee-pot and Target. And after perusing the aisles at both places The Search for Bookcases was starting to look rather dire.
However, in desperation, we took a closer look at these stackable cube things that Target is selling. And lo and behold! The measurements were right. The shelves were tall enough to hold my textbooks and binders, and there were these cute little cubes that you could mix and match all over the place to get the look you wanted.
There was even a rounded end piece. AND the color appeared to match my desks that we'd purchased years ago, at least, so we were hoping.
*Assembly Required
Um yeah.
Assembly took a while. But the good thing was that by the end of Sunday night, my office was D.O.N.E.!!
I took these pics a week and a half ago Monday, when the light was nice.
First, the view from the door was no longer daunting!
Perhaps welcoming even!

And yes, that is my iBook in white on the desk! Beautiful new lovey.
And tah-dah! The Bookcases!

Aren't they GRRRRReat! (in the manner of Tony the Tiger)
It makes me smile to see them.
And that glowing thing on top, is the lamp we found at Ikea. I've always been really into spiral shapes, so I glommed onto this lamp really fast.
And I've been just waiting to hang my little party lights up somewhere!
And I've got my slinky's and magic sand in the little cube. And most of my pictures.
And did you notice the rounded end piece? I know the lines of books and binders are rather distracting, so I thought I'd point all of that out.
At some point, it would be nice to change the paint color and actually hang my pictures up. But there is time for that later.
For now, writing calls.
Posted by danielle at 09:44 AM | Comments (11) | TrackBack
When I flew in last week, HB took me out to dinner at Don Pablo's (yum!). Then, because we needed breakfast food, we stopped at the grocery store near our house.
It is sooooo completely gorgeous. I walked around saying "I can't believe it! This is so amazing!"
Sometime, I'll take Dee-Dee with me, and show you what I mean.
Actually, when I stopped there the other day, I was in the vegetable aisle, and I was itching to take photos of the produce. The displays were that pretty.
Anyway, back to the night I flew in, I saw some beautiful mums when I first walked in and stopped in my tracks. HB, being the observant hubby, told me that I could get some flowers. This statement, of course, led to my hemming and hawing between the cut flowers and the potted mums.
"Do I get cut flowers, which include some beautiful gerbera daisies in lovely autumn shades, but which will only last for a week?"
"Or do I get the potted mum which will last for quite a long time and are pretty in their own right but aren't the same as the gerbera daisies?"
HB, probably wanting to keep our trip as short as possible *wink wink*, suggested that we get both.
BOTH!
Yay!
So, on Thursday of last week, I set up a little photoshoot of the flowers in the late afternoon light.
Yes! That is our new home!
But back to the flowers, I was struck by how the view of the daisy from the side reminded me of a feather duster.
And when I stepped back a little bit, the shadow on the grass was actually very pretty too.
At the time, the light was changing minute by minute and I was working kind of fast to get the photos I had in mind before the light changed too much. And I didn't think to find the tripod ahead of time. So, I still haven't done any photos with a tripod and the timer on Dee-Dee yet. I want to try taking photos that way though, because I read on the Flickr Nikon D70 group that it is one way to get really clear close-up shots (no jiggling while you hold the camera and while you press the button).
For now, though, I'm happy with how this turned out.
It felt really good to spend some time with Dee-Dee. I hadn't realized how much I've missed getting to spend time on photography.
I took all photos with Dee-Dee, my Nikon D70, last Thursday in the late afternoon light of our new home.
Posted by danielle at 12:10 PM | Comments (9) | TrackBack
Tonight, I got to meet one of my blogging friends IN PERSON. No more just a photo on a flat computer monitor, but a three-dimensional, real, live, person!

Yup! That's Amber and me in a self-portrait!
The funny part of it is that we'd talked about how once I moved here we wanted to go to Cold Stone Creamery together for ice cream. How is that funny, you ask? Well, just hooooold on, I'm getting there.
Anyway, we had kind of batted around the idea of whether it should be with our spouses in tow, or just the 2 (or 3 (Jonah) of us). In the end, it worked out really well to just have a girl's night (+Jonah, the cutie-pie). Andy is out of town, and HB had to work late = Cool.
We morphed it into supper and time to hang out before going out for ice cream. And wouldn't you know it, but the time got away from us and before we realized it, we were too late to go out for ice cream! Doh! There's the funny part, I know, I know. If I hadn't pointed it out you would've completely missed the funniness. Aren't you glad that you've got me to point it out?
We substituted yummy coffee drinks from Caribou instead, which was better because it is dang cold outside, ya know?
yahhhh Danielle, you betcha.
Here, to make up for my lack of funny stories and lame Minnesota accent jokes, I give you the cuteness of Jonah.
Jonah, who is known to be particularly fond of a wooden spoon, right now, decided that the Girlie-girl's plastic cat brush might just be a reasonable substitute.

Of course, all of the camera action brought over the camera hog, I mean, the Girlie-girl.

She was a bit skeeerd of that small animal that didn't have the right color of fur. Even if he is smaller, she was just not sure that he wasn't going to perhaps encroach upon her territory.
But Jonah's good natured attitude was not deterred by the unfriendliness of the Girlie. Nope! He is just a very happy little boy.
Very curious too.
"Hey! What are those things on your face?"

"Do they taste good?"

"um, I'm not so sure that I want them on my face. They are better on yours. But I would like to taste them again, really."

Amber and I took these pictures tonight with Dee-Dee.
Posted by danielle at 12:48 AM | Comments (9) | TrackBack
There are still several aspects of moving here that I haven't gotten to blog about yet.
The first is about the Girlie-Girl.
The night I walked in the door, she acted very afraid of me. I don't know if she'd given me up for dead and thought I was a ghost or if it was that I smelled like Tizer and airplane fuel. Either way, she wasn't. too. sure. what. to. think. about. me. quite. yet.
After HB showed me a bit of the seeeekrit squirrel stuff (more about that another day), I sat on the floor and let her sniff and sniff me. And then she slowly let me pet her on the head.
Maybe. that's. okay.
Oh but wait, maybe not. *swipe*
Okay then, we'll just go look at more of the house and the monumental job of unpacking that HB did before I arrived. And then I sat on the couch and called her over. And she finally came over, and sniffed me, and I petted her on the head for a little bit longer than the previous time. And then she swiped at me.
And that happened one more time on the floor in the living room, the sniffing, petting, and swiping. And then FInally, she seemed to get the sniffing and swiping part out of her system.
By the next day, we were allllll friends again. I think the only time I got scratched was playing with her.
When we went to Target to buy her cat litter, we were in the cat aisle you know. So, I made sure to get her a brush to replace the one that got lost in the move and a couple new toys.
And ohhhhh does she lurve the new brush, let me tell you.
"Oh, over here, please."
"ummmm, yeaaah, right there."
And the new toys? Well, they are both mice. I have let her have one for now and she'll get the other one later sometime.
"Oh! What's this!"

"mmmmmmm... smells good."

"And it is alllllllllllllways better when I rub the side of my face on it."

"Geeeee, Danie, why'd you move the toy into the sun?

"You know, I kinda liked it better in the shade. Now that it is in the sun, the sun is awfully distracting, and is ever so much better than that little ol' mouse."

Oh, did I mention that this toy is from Fat Cat, Inc.?
Appropriate name, eh?
But shhhhh, don't ever say the F word to her. Or she'll get mad.
"Oh! Look! The mouse is moving! That is everrrr so much betterrrr!"

Note the claws on that left paw, which is why I'm so very carefully trying to reach for the mouse tail.

Cause when all four feet get going.... well, I'm not crazy ya know, I like my skin intact.
Posted by danielle at 10:22 PM | Comments (17) | TrackBack
I have a few things I've been wanting to share with you, when I got a chance. Hmmm... this moment really needs a photo too, doesn't it? hmmmm... I think that'll be tomorrow's post (details to follow).
I'll tell you all of this in chronological order, I think it is easiest.
First, let's go back a few weeks. I mentioned to some of you about how I didn't have access to my danielleblog email. Well, part of the reason was that my good ol' laptop died. Normally, this is the sort of situation where HB jumps in and figures out what is wrong. But he was in MN and I was in MA and there's only so much jumping one can do from half-way across the country, you know. So, I took it to the Geek Squad at Best Buy. Now, they had said 48 hrs. for a diagnosis. Before I ever took it in, HB and I discussed 'worst case' scenarios. In the best case, they'd fix it and I'd happily plan to write my thesis on my ol' trusty laptop. In the 'worst case', I would prematurely make the leap to using mac software because we would buy my mac laptop NOW instead of waiting until I start my post-doc. You see, the lab I will be in for my post-doc is a Mac lab, while my current one is Windows. I had really just wanted to do my thesis on my Windows laptop, because I fear having all of my graphs get screwy moving them from Windows to Mac. Plus, I have to be able to email back and forth with my advisor using track changes in Word to get corrections on all of my drafts of my thesis chapters. That is a long-winded explanation for why getting a brand-spankin' new laptop would be considered a 'worst case'.
And then I waited. I waited 48 hours for the diagnosis (and called). And waited 72 hours.. and then we hit 4 days... and 5 days... and HB ordered me a new Mac. An iBook G4 to be precise. Because at that point, I was barely going to have time to receive it at school and move my 4 Gb of data onto my new iBook before I had to leave. You might be able to imagine the panic that was starting to set in.
On the 6th day, they figured out that the power supply in my Windows laptop was loose, and they easily repaired it by screwing it in tighter. I imagine that the power supply has been loose for a while; it probably happened back when HB took my laptop apart to fix my fan (and clean out the cat hair). But it wasn't until I turned it on its side and carried it in my back-pack to move to Lola's that it was josteled enought to really matter.
My iBook arrived. And LET ME TELL YOU she is sooooo beautiful!
I squealed when I saw the box and the beautiful white shiny laptop inside. I haven't had a NEW computer since I entered undergrad... which was, hmmmm... (you know how I am about math and years and all...) 13 years ago! All this time, I've just been using hand-me-downs from HB.
For my first hand-me-down, I had to press really hard on the top of the lid while turning it on, to get it to start, because he'd managed to somehow break a power connection inside. Sometimes, I'd press and press and it would take 3 tries to get it to start.
yeah. That was really not so great.
The second hand-me-down always had to be plugged in, because the battery was totally ruined. Oh, and then the fan broke. And then well, you know the part about the power supply.
And you know what his first thought was about switching me to Mac right? "Oh, well, I'll just give you mine and that way I can upgrade to a new one."
!!
I put my foot down on that one.
I get to have a NEW ONE this time! NO more hand-me-downs with dysfunctional parts!
So, back to my beautiful new baby. She shines! And is pretty!
And she ate my powerpoint presentation that I had created in Windows and moved onto her and puked up this mess of ruined error bars and skinny little lines for the line graphs.
I became less enamored of her at that point.
However, HB tells me that there are special ways to save things that I've created on my Windows computer. And move them and that there are probably software patches and whatever to make her treat my Windows things right.
For right now, the jury is kind of out about whether or not I'll use her to write my thesis. I'm still worried about stuff getting screwy if my advisor and I transfer documents back and forth.
So... we'll see.
But she sure is pretty. And clearly works well for blogging.
:-)
I guess this is long enough for now.
I'll tell you tomorrow about, the seeeeekrits that HB surprised me with last night when I arrived in MN!
I might even have a peeeeeeekture that is fitting for Flowers for Friday!
Did I mention that we are both taking these 4 days off? Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
We are going furniture shopping as soon as I post this.
teeeeee-heeeeee!
cya!
Posted by danielle at 11:00 AM | Comments (11) | TrackBack
This is the last one in this particular fall leaf series. I think you can all see why this leaf jumped out at me when I saw it on the sidewalk.
Here is what I like about each image, that I think all of you have noticed too.
In the first one, you can see the yellow cells outlined by the green borders. They are so close to the green vein and reddish-orange region that provide nice contrast (but in retrospect, might be a hint more distracting than I'd planned on). If I were to re-post that one, I think I'd crop out the green vein.
In the second one, the veins are the star of the show. I'd intended for the color variation to be the focus, but the crevases of the veins and the patterns really draw your eye.
In the third one, the symmetry, and the tye-dye appearance really appeal to me. I also really like how the green reminds me of rays of sun coming up over the horizon or some sort of star burst.
In the fourth one, the green horns are just unbelievable. It also reminds me of a Rorschach blot in the way the patterns on each side are similar but not perfectly symmetrical. My eye is always drawn to the center vein and the red outline of cells around it. I just can't quit tracing it with my eyes.
It reminds me of these art things my sister and I used to make. We'd start with our name or letters in black, and then would carefuly outline around it with one color of marker, and then another color. We'd keep tracing until an entire 8 1/2 x 11 paper was filled with lines of tracing. It might take all day to carefully trace with markers and not bleed into the nearby color.... but the end result was just beautiful. I wonder if we have any of those stored away at my parent's home? I know Mom saved most of our artwork from school. If I ever get a chance to find it, I'll show you what I mean.
This last one, isn't quite like seeing the leaf on the sidewalk... but well, you can get a sense of what it looked like from farther away and what caught my eye.

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Posted by danielle at 09:29 AM | Comments (3) | TrackBack

I found a beautiful fall leaf on the sidewalk on my way into school the other morning. I think it was Wednesday. I'm not sure what type of leaf, someone who saw it said Maple. Perhaps. I don't really know. All I know, is that this type of tree is my favorite.
Every fall, I see these trees that are part green, part orange and part red, with hints of yellow and colors in between, and I am awe struck by them.
For this particular leaf, I admired it for the remainder of my walk to the train station, tucked it away safely in my bag, and scanned it when I got into school.
I thought about putting it under a dissecting microscope and taking a digital image of it that way. But well, it takes a while to get the scope and lighting set up for materials that need to be lit from above, and I simply didn't have the time.
I scanned it at 800 dpi and I am going to post pics of it each day from the closest view to the one that is zoomed out.
This first one is full resolution, just one small portion of it.
I like how you can see the colors changing from region to region. And you can see the veins and the cells. Especially at the bottom of this image where the green and yellow ones are located.
Biology is so beautiful.
Posted by danielle at 10:26 AM | Comments (4) | TrackBack
I was tagged by Momo with the latest meme that is going around.
I'm doing this from memory, and you know how that goes, right?
So, I'm supposed to go to the 2nd and 3rd posts in my archives and show you the 5th picture in each one, right?
Well, my second post was Tails from the Bike: week 1, part 2, and it only had 4 pics and not five.
But the fourth one is close enough for government work, as they say. Right?

That pic was taken on our bike trip into Concord. That is the Old North Bridge in the background where the first shots of the Revolutionary War were fired.
Um, not while we were there, ya know. Uh, years and years ago.
And the third post was Tails from the Bike: week 2.
The fifth picture in that post was not one of my own, but was related to the story I was telling.

Um, yeah. I may be a crazy cat lady, but at least I don't look like her.
yet.
Does that one count? Perhaps not.
The 5th one that I actually took was the one from when I was all excited that we ended up behind a truck full of cranberries.

Of course, all of this is making me yearn to go biking...
Oh wait!
*smacks forehead*
I was supposed to go to the 23rd post, Blizzard 2005 - dumped on, and show you the fifth picture, right?
Um, lets not dwell on that last pic, shall we?
That takes care of the tag, right?
;-)
Posted by danielle at 09:23 PM | Comments (7) | TrackBack
I saw this over at Ern's blog. Evidently, even though I'm a wee bit late, Sept 24th-Oct 1 was banned book week. Squirl participated at her blog too.
The American Library Association has compiled a list of the 100 most frequently challenged books from 1990-2000.
Evidently, they don't use the word 'banned'.
The idea is to bold the books that you have read. The ones that I think I've read but I'm not entirely positive, I've chosen to italicize.
1. Scary Stories (Series) by Alvin Schwartz
2. Daddy's Roommate by Michael Willhoite
3. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
4. The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
5. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
6. Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
7. Harry Potter (Series) by J.K. Rowling
8. Forever by Judy Blume
9. Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson
10. Alice (Series) by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
11. Heather Has Two Mommies by Leslea Newman
12. My Brother Sam is Dead by James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier
13. The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
14. The Giver by Lois Lowry
15. It's Perfectly Normal by Robie Harris
16. Goosebumps (Series) by R.L. Stine
17. A Day No Pigs Would Die by Robert Newton Peck
18. The Color Purple by Alice Walker
19. Sex by Madonna
20. Earth's Children (Series) by Jean M. Auel
21. The Great Gilly Hopkins by Katherine Paterson
22. A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle
23. Go Ask Alice by Anonymous
24. Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers
25. In the Night Kitchen by Maurice Sendak
26. The Stupids (Series) by Harry Allard
27. The Witches by Roald Dahl
28. The New Joy of Gay Sex by Charles Silverstein
29. Anastasia Krupnik (Series) by Lois Lowry
30. The Goats by Brock Cole
31. Kaffir Boy by Mark Mathabane
32. Blubber by Judy Blume
33. Killing Mr. Griffin by Lois Duncan
34. Halloween ABC by Eve Merriam
35. We All Fall Down by Robert Cormier
36. Final Exit by Derek Humphry
37. The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
38. Julie of the Wolves by Jean Craighead George
39. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
40. What's Happening to my Body? Book for Girls: A Growing-Up Guide for Parents & Daughters by Lynda Madaras
41. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
42. Beloved by Toni Morrison
43. The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton
44. The Pigman by Paul Zindel
45. Bumps in the Night by Harry Allard
46. Deenie by Judy Blume
47. Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
48. Annie on my Mind by Nancy Garden
49. The Boy Who Lost His Face by Louis Sachar
50. Cross Your Fingers, Spit in Your Hat by Alvin Schwartz
51. A Light in the Attic by Shel Silverstein
52. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
53. Sleeping Beauty Trilogy by A.N. Roquelaure (Anne Rice)
54. Asking About Sex and Growing Up by Joanna Cole
55. Cujo by Stephen King
56. James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl
57. The Anarchist Cookbook by William Powell
58. Boys and Sex by Wardell Pomeroy
59. Ordinary People by Judith Guest
60. American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis
61. What's Happening to my Body? Book for Boys: A Growing-Up Guide for Parents & Sons by Lynda Madaras
62. Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret by Judy Blume
63. Crazy Lady by Jane Conly
64. Athletic Shorts by Chris Crutcher
65. Fade by Robert Cormier
66. Guess What? by Mem Fox
67. The House of Spirits by Isabel Allende
68. The Face on the Milk Carton by Caroline Cooney
69. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
70. Lord of the Flies by William Golding
71. Native Son by Richard Wright
72. Women on Top: How Real Life Has Changed Women's Fantasies by Nancy Friday
73. Curses, Hexes and Spells by Daniel Cohen
74. Jack by A.M. Homes
75. Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo A. Anaya
76. Where Did I Come From? by Peter Mayle
77. Carrie by Stephen King
78. Tiger Eyes by Judy Blume
79. On My Honor by Marion Dane Bauer
80. Arizona Kid by Ron Koertge
81. Family Secrets by Norma Klein
82. Mommy Laid An Egg by Babette Cole
83. The Dead Zone by Stephen King
84. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
85. Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison
86. Always Running by Luis Rodriguez
87. Private Parts by Howard Stern
88. Where's Waldo? by Martin Hanford
89. Summer of My German Soldier by Bette Greene
90. Little Black Sambo by Helen Bannerman
91. Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett
92. Running Loose by Chris Crutcher
93. Sex Education by Jenny Davis
94. The Drowning of Stephen Jones by Bette Greene
95. Girls and Sex by Wardell Pomeroy
96. How to Eat Fried Worms by Thomas Rockwell
97. View from the Cherry Tree by Willo Davis Roberts
98. The Headless Cupid by Zilpha Keatley Snyder
99. The Terrorist by Caroline Cooney
100. Jump Ship to Freedom by James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier
Can you believe I haven't read a book called The Chocolate War? And the Sleeping Beauty Trilogy? Of course, Anne Rice kinda creeps me out. I read her sister's books instead, Alice Borchardt.
I also think it is interesting how many of these have won Newberry book awards. I looked at some of them on Amazon to see if they were the ones that I'd remembered and a lot of them had won an award. When I was a child, if I saw that sticker on a book, I'd check it out from the library, regardless of if the story originally looked interesting to me or not.
I suppose winning the award is part of what brings them to the attention of people and sets them up as a target, so to speak. Interesting, to see which ones get challenged, isn't it?
Posted by danielle at 08:29 AM | Comments (5) | TrackBack










