Showing posts with label Entranced. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entranced. Show all posts

Oct 10, 2024

Happy Birthday Nora πŸŽ‚



 

"Every year on my birthday I give myself a gift. It's very simple, really.

One day to do whatever I choose. 

Whatever feels right to me."


Entranced



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unbekannt, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons



How do you feel about celebrating your birthday?


As my birthday rolls around this year, I’ve been thinking about how people feel about their birthday arriving and whether they treat it like a celebration or not.

 

I have friends who feel it’s nothing special and prefer to ignore it, others who acknowledge it but don’t like being made a fuss of, and then others who love an excuse to take the day off work and enjoy being spoilt.


Start With You


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“We’ll have to save room for it and the ice cream,” John said. “After the birthday dinner. We were going to get pizza, but you started those meatballs, so we adjusted.”

Everything went bright, as if the sun burst through the pounding rain. “You’re going to stay.”

“I repeat, it’s your birthday. No way I’m missing out on ice cream and cake. We’ll wait for the others for eats, but I think you should open your gifts now.”

“Really? It’s all right?”

“Obviously, the genius doesn’t comprehend the power of birthday. Here.”


The Witness



Oct 10, 2018

πŸ₯‚ Happy NORA's Day 🍰








The one gift Ana always gave herself on her birthday was a completely free day.
She could be as lazy as she chose, or as industrious. She could get up at dawn
and gorge on ice cream for breakfast, or she could laze in bed until noon
watching old movies on television.
The single best plan for the one day of the year that belonged only to her was no
plan at all.



Entranced




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In order to comply with the use and licensing terms of this image, 
the following text must must be included 
with the image when published in any medium, failure to do so constitutes 
a violation  of the licensing terms and copyright infringement: 
© Tomas Castelazo, www.tomascastelazo.com / Wikimedia Commons







How Can I Tell What I Exactly Want For My Birthday?



What do you want for your birthday? Wait, don't tell me,
 I already know! If you also wanna know then play 
this surprising gift quiz.












___________________






“Does your mother have a birthday coming up?”
“She stopped having them about ten years ago. 
We just call it Marlene’s Day.”
“Smart woman.”



Remember When






Jan 21, 2016

What Your Work Desk Says About You

Now she paced her new office, ten stories up in midtown Manhattan. She swept from corner to corner over the deep oatmeal-colored carpet. Everything was perfectly in place, papers, files, coordinated appointment and address books. Even her brass-and-ebony desk set was perfectly aligned, the pens and pencils marching in a straight row across the polished mahogany, the notepads carefully placed beside the phone.

Her appearance mirrored the meticulous precision and tasteful elegance of the office. Her crisp beige suit was all straight lines and starch, but didn't disguise the fact that there was a great pair of legs striding across the carpet.
With it she wore a single strand of pearls, earrings to match and a slim gold watch, all very discreet and exclusive. As a Hayward, she'd been raised to be both.

Luring a Lady


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"22 West - home office" by AgnosticPreachersKid - Own work. 
Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:22_West_-_home_office.jpg#/media/File:22_West_-_home_office.jpg




Clutter can actually have a negative impact on your productivity and workflow, as marketing software company Marketo explains. Not only that, the company reveals that 57% of Americans admit to judging their coworkers based on the state of their desks.
But what information can your coworkers really glean about you from a pile of papers and notebooks and packages? A lot, actually.


______________________

 As offices went, he'd seen worse. And he'd certainly seen better. Her desk was army-surplus gray steel, functional and tough, but far from aesthetically pleasing. Two metal file cabinets were shoved against a wall that would have benefited from a coat of paint. There were two chairs, one in a lurid purple, the other a faded print, on either side of a skinny table that held ancient magazines and was scarred with sundry cigarette burns.

 On the wall behind them, as out of place as an elegant woman in a waterfront dive, was a lovely watercolor of Monterey Bay. The room smelled inexplicably like a spring meadow.

 He caught a glimpse of the room behind her and saw that it was a tiny and unbelievably disordered kitchen.

 He couldn't resist.

 Tucking his hands in his pockets, he smiled at her. "Some digs."

 She took another drink, then dangled the bottle between two fingers. "Have you got business with me, Donovan?"

 "Have you got another bottle of that?"

 After a moment, she shrugged, then stepped over the phone books again to snatch one out of the refrigerator. "I don't think you came down off your mountain for a drink."

 "But I rarely turn one down." He twisted off the top after she handed him the bottle. He skimmed his gaze over her, taking in the snug jeans and the scarred boots, then moving back up, to the tipped-up chin, with its fascinating little center dip, all the way to the distrustful dark green eyes.


Entranced