Showing posts with label Gabriel's Angel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gabriel's Angel. Show all posts

Jun 21, 2022

Best Haircuts for Mature Women

 


“I can’t believe how fast he’s growing.” Feeling very grandmotherly but sporting a sleek new hairstyle, Amanda sat in the bentwood rocker in Michael’s new nursery and cuddled the baby.


Gabriel's Angel


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geehairimages, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons



Many of us have been scared off by the frumpy hairstyles women are expected to don after turning 60. Thankfully, we are not obligated to choose any of them.

 

There are many great hairstyles that will work for women over 60—and they are all stylish, elegant, and easy to fit into your lifestyle. No matter your thoughts on gray versus no gray, or short versus long, these hairstyles have you covered.



Southern Living




Oct 12, 2019

How to find awe in everyday things




“Look, the sun’s coming up.”
Laura stirred and opened her eyes. Through the window she could see the
curve of the eastern sky. If she looked hard enough she could see the water of
the bay, like a mist in the distance. The sun seemed to vibrate as it rose. And the
echoes brought colors: pinks, mauves, golds. Softly at first, with the darker
night sky still dominating above, the colors spread, then deepened. Pinks
became reds, vibrant and glowing.
“Sometimes your paintings are like that,” she thought aloud. “Changing,
shifting angles, with the colors intensifying from the core to the edges.” She
nestled her head against his shoulder as they watched the new day dawn. “I
don’t think I’ve ever seen a more beautiful sunrise.”


Gabriel's Angel



____________________




By Terry Lucas - Imported from 500px (archived version) by the 
Archive Team. (detail page), CC BY 3.0, 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=73670160








You don't have to scale Everest to reap the benefits of wonder.





The word "awesome" is ubiquitous these days – used to describe almost anything agreeable from a slice of Margherita pizza to that new sweater you just bought. But can these things really inspire a life-altering sense of wonderment and reverence?









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She stroked the baby's cheek and
thought—hoped—Carrie smiled a little.
Grace was tempted to sing her to sleep, 
but knew the nursing staff rolled their
eyes and snickered whenever she tried a lullaby. 
Still, the babies were rarely
critical of her admittedly poor singing voice, 
so she half sang, half murmured,
until Carrie's baby owl's eyes grew heavy.
Even when she slept, Grace continued to rock. 
It was self-serving now, she knew.
Anyone who had ever rocked a baby 
understood that it soothed the adult, as well
as the child.


Secret Star





Dec 12, 2018

Winter Driving: How to Survive






Damn snow. Gabe downshifted to second gear, slowed the Jeep
 to fifteen miles an hour, swore and strained his eyes. 
Through the frantic swing of the wipers on the windshield 
all that could be seen was a wall of white. 
No winter wonderland. 


Gabriel's Angel





__________________






By HopsonRoad - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=54631963






Winter adds an extra level of danger when a car breaks down.






__________________




He was hungry, soaked to the skin, and afraid he would run out of
gas-petrol-before he found anything remotely like an inn or village.
In his mind he went over the map. Visualizing was a talent he'd
been born with, and he could, with little effort, reproduce every line
of the careful map his hostess had sent him.
The trouble was, it was pitch dark, the rain washed over his
windshield like a roaring river, and the wind was buffeting his car
on this godforsaken excuse for a road as if the Mercedes was a
Tinkertoy.
He wished violently for coffee.
When the road forked, Gray took his chances and guided the car
to the left. If he didn't find the inn or something like in it another ten
miles, he'd sleep in the damn car and try again in the morning.



Born in Ice



Dec 4, 2018

Why does snow make the world so quiet?





"I guess the quiet woke me. It's odd, don't you think, how quiet it is?"
"The snow always makes it quiet."



The Return of Rafe MacKade




_____________________






By Stulli - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3834213






Hush. It's snowing outside.
At least, doesn't it feel like that when snowflakes make their grand entrance, pirouetting from the sky like tiny, twirling ballerinas?
And we're pressed up against windows, eyes wide open. Or outside, all giddy smiles with tongues eagerly outstretched.
Snowflakes look good. They even taste good. But they sound like … nothing.



_____________________



On impulse, she bundled herself in her boots and coat and stepped out onto the porch.
Though Gabe had shoveled it off twice during the day, the snow came almost to her knees. Her boots sank in 
and disappeared. She had the sensation of being swallowed up by a soft, benign cloud. 
She wrapped her arms around her chest and breathed in the thin, cold air.


There were no stars. There was no moon. The porch light tossed its glow only a few feet. 
All she could see was white. 
All she could hear was silence.



Gabriel's Angel 





Jan 15, 2018

Go Ahead—Draw On The Walls





“She showed me the mural in the parlor. The one with all the mythical creatures.” 
“I was twenty, and romantic.” 
And he’d asked his mother a dozen times to have it painted over. 
“I like it.” 


Gabriel's Angel



__________________



Mom and Dad always said not to draw on the walls. These two Minneapolis women politely disagree.











Imagine wallpaper, minus the paper. Just an imaginative pattern painted directly on the canvas that is your home. Sure, it’s unorthodox. But for Minneapolis artists Kate Worum and Jennifer Jorgensen, it’s an expression of bravery—in style, and in life.






__________________



“What’s wrong with unicorns and centaurs and fairies?” 
“They have their place, I suppose.” 


Gabriel's Angel






Sep 5, 2014

Beauty and Wisdom

"I can't believe how fast he's growing." 
Feeling very grandmotherly but sporting a sleek new hairstyle, Amanda sat in the bentwood rocker in Michael's new nursery and cuddled the baby.
...
"Does he?" Delighted Laura moved to stand over them. 
The baby smelled of talc -- Amanda of Paris.

Gabriel's Angel

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Culturally speaking, youth has a near-monopoly on our definition of beauty. But for photographer Robbie Kaye, the opposite is true. Her photo essay and book, Beauty and Wisdom, aims to combat ageism by documenting older women...

“Initially I was going to make these photos fun and frivolous, but in looking at the women, I realized how much dignity they had and how amazing they were,” 



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And she’d had enough, Eli judged, and looked a little pale again. “What’s for lunch?”
“We should go down and find out.”
He helped her up, but when he started to lift her, she brushed him back. “I don’t need to be carried. I manage well enough with the cane.”
“Maybe, but I like playing Rhett Butler.”
“He wasn’t carrying his grandmother downstairs to lunch,” she said when Eli scooped her into his arms.
“But he would have.”

Whiskey Beach