AN IRISH CIVIL SERVANT WHO TOOK AN OBSCURE ROMANIAN PRINCE & MADE HIM A PARASITICAL LEGEND

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Pictures from store fronts in Mt. Dora http://www.mountdora.com/  Nothing much going on here.  Worked all day yesterday–am reorganizing things and the place looks like an explosion.  HELP  Got breakfast sandwiches from Dunkin’ Donuts https://www.dunkindonuts.com/dunkindonuts/en.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There was something about them that made me uneasy, some longing and at the same time some deadly fear. I felt in my heart a wicked, burning desire that they would kiss me with those red lips.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

STEAMPUNK Original spiral with clock face PENDANT. Length-25"

Guess who’s the most watched:  Check it out:
OF COURSE—hoping I’d find this on the other side:
TODAY,  as promised, we continue with Vampires and in particular the creator of our modern genre:  Bram Stoker.
As we saw yesterday vampires are not new or peculiar to the European (especially English speaking) mindset and legend, they had been around in legend and folk beliefs which resulted in staked corpses and archeological finds of stones wedged in same’s mouths to name a few.
THEN in 1819 we have our first real vampire book THE VAMPYRE written by John Polidori (John William Polidori (7 September 1795 – 24 August 1821) was an English writer and physician. He is known for his associations with the Romantic movement and credited by some as the creator of the vampire genre of fantasy fiction. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_William_Polidori).  While there had been a growing interest in the vampire during the early 19th century (Carmilia for one and a “penny dreadful”  Varney the Vampire as another example of the early interest.) it was this story that is credited as the first true vampire story and not a myth or folk tale as had been the norm before this.
“I read that every known superstition in the world is gathered into the horseshoe of the Carpathians, as if it were the centre of some sort of imaginative whirlpool; if so my stay may be very interesting.”
ABRAHAM “BRAM” STOKER (1847-1912)
Born in Dublin, he at 16 he entered Trinity College (still Dublin) graduating with a Bachelor’s Degree (and honors) in science (1870) and became a civil servant at Dublin (where else?) Castle.   He became a drama critic (unpaid) and became an editor of the Irish Echo (also unpaid) in 1874,    He obtained a masters in 1875.  He wrote his first horror piece (“The Chain of Destiny in the Shamrock) that same year.
He (finally) left Dublin in 1878 to become manager of the Lyceum theater in London (which he did apparently get paid for) and continued to write, including a group of children stories in 1882 and a novel in 1889.   Rumor has it that a nightmare of a raising vampire after he read Camilla gave him the inspiration to write the book that made him famous.  It was published to mixed review in 1897.  After the Lyceum was destroyed by fire he began to begin writing full time and produced several novels.  None save The White Worm has survived the age and none (few do) reached the height of Dracula–though Ken Russell made a movie of White Worm in 1992.
In 1905 he had a stroke an developed Bright’s disease,  his health continued to deteriorate until his death in 1912.   He was not a wealthy man and left his wife on the edge of poverty.
 “Was this a customary incident in the life of a solicitor’s clerk sent out to explain the purchase of a London estate to a foreigner?”
The Real Dracula: Vlad the Impaler:  Stoker certainly drew on popular Central European folktales about the nosferatu (“undead”), but he also seems to have been inspired by historical accounts of the 15th-century Romanian prince Vlad Tepes, or Vlad the Impaler. Born in Transylvania (1431) as the second son of the nobleman Vlad II Dracul, he took the name Dracula, meaning “son of Dracul,” when he was initiated into a secret order of Christian knights (at age 5)(known as the Order of the Dragon. (In Romanian, Dracul means “dragon.”)”  http://www.livescience.com/48536-vlad-the-impaler-dark-secrets.html
When the Turkish Empire threatened to invade his land, Vlad II (Dracula’s father) sent him and his younger brother to the Sultan’s court as hostage to his pledge to be his vassal  Vlad went on to become an officer in the Turkish Army and was placed on the throne as a puppet ruler (by the Sultan) on his father’s murder, but that only lasted a few months when Hungry invaded and deposed him.  But eventually he impressed the Hungarians enough to put him back on the Wallachia throne, which he took possession of when he drove the Turks out.
His life and history is of a man who was cruel, brutal and bloody to an excess in a time when the world and particularly his little part of it were known for their cruelty and excess of violence, torture and almost constant state of war.
“Killed in December 1476 fighting the Turks near Bucharest, Romania, Dracula’s head was cut off and displayed in Constantinople.”   His coffin was exhumed in 1931 and….The contents were taken to the History Museum in Bucharest but have since disappeared without a trace, leaving the mysteries of the real Prince Dracula unanswered. ”  http://www.infoplease.com/spot/dracula1.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

“As the Count leaned over me and his hands touched me… a horrible feeling of nausea came over me, which, do what I would, I could not conceal.”

 

 

 

 

 

and when Mild mannered Irish Clerk meets vicious Transylvanian ruler they produced a name that would live in infamy:

 

 

 

 

 

DRACULA:  A name that has long been our definition of Vampire.    It has been said that though he spent years researching this book, Stoker’s chronicle was not even a best seller (at least initially—though there was an extremely successful play made of it during the author’s life time.), and yet it went on to reach a height that few authors ever reach and his book is still in print and very much a part of the world’s literature over 100 years after his death.   Many feel that the real power of his book “lies in the then-shocking imagery of biting, blood and the vampire’s hypnotic power over women.”  (Vampire by Joules Taylor)
Count Dracula  “He is considered thus to be both the prototypical and the archetypical vampire in subsequent works of fiction. …. The character has subsequently appeared frequently in popular culture, from films to animated media to breakfast…” cereals….https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Count_Dracula
“In appearance, Count Dracula is described as being a “tall old man, clean shaven, save for a long white mustache and clad in black from head to foot, without a single speck of color about him anywhere.” …Dracula sporting a large, bushy Victorian mustache and having a profuse head of dense, curly hair, massive eyebrows, and peculiarly sharp white teeth, especially the canine teeth. ”     http://www.cliffsnotes.com/literature/d/dracula/character-list
“When the Count saw my face, his eyes blazed with a sort of demonaic fury, and he suddenly made a grab at my throat. I drew away, and his hand touched the string of beads which held the crucifix. It made an instant change in him, for the fury passed so quickly that I could hardly believe that it was ever there.”
“Between me and the moonlight flitted a great bat, comeing and going in great, whirling circles.”
SOURCES:
Dr. Bob Curran:  A Field Guide to the Creature that Stalk the Night:  Vampire
J.Gordon Melton:   The Vampire Book:  The Encyclopedia of the Undead
All quotes in red are from Stoker’s  DRACULA

I happen to like vampires more than zombies. Martin Scorsese

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Greetings from my house—where both pictures are from—I’m getting into my favorite season.  Great weekend–Drinks with friends on Friday night, Sat just roaming about and eating a Chili’s always fun https://sbmenus.com/restaurants/chilis-bar-and-grill-goleta/takeout yesterday had the most fun–Shakespeare Theater at Lock Haven http://www.orlandoshakes.org/  where we saw Spam-A-Lot http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/arts-and-theater/os-spamalot-review-orlando-matthew-j-palm-20150911-column.html which was loads of fun.   HONORABLE MENTIONWalk in the Woods  www.shopwalkinthewoods.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Persians were one of the first civilizations thought to have tales of blood-drinking demons: creatures attempting to drink blood from men were depicted on excavated pottery shards.   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vampire_folklore_by_region

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

White & Gold Flower NECKLACE VINTAGE 15" Long

Check out these real visits to Outlander Sights

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finding a vampire is not always easy: according to one Romanian legend you’ll need a 7-year-old boy and a white horse. The boy should be dressed in white, placed upon the horse, and the pair set loose in a graveyard at midday. Watch the horse wander around, and whichever grave is nearest the horse when it finally stops is a vampire’s grave — or it might just have something edible nearby; take your pick.      http://www.livescience.com/24374-vampires-real-history.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2 1/4" Baby DOLL with Minute Croucheted DRESS BEAUTIFUL

Today we’re getting into the Halloween Spirit and all this week we’re doing Vampire and other legends that make it better.
This practice of digging up, burning, or otherwise attempting to restrain the deceased was a widespread practice in many Western countries until the early 20th century, and it was intended to prevent what people at the time thought of as vampires: Dead victims of disease that literally sucked the life out of the living from beyond the grave.       http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/10/what-vampire-graves-tell-us-about-ancient-superstitions/280879/
 
What better reminds of us of Halloween than the things and creatures that go bump in the night and what better example than the VAMPIRE.   THE VAMPIRE,  a dead person who has returned to life or a strange resemblance of it — rather not alive but “undead”.  Not a ghost or animated spirit but a full bodied thinking creature of the night that; except for the eating habits and a few other things  like nocturnal vs. day time habitation; is in most aspects the dearly departed.  Unlike other animated creatures: for instance the mindless ghoul or the revolting (not to mention rotting) zombie  this is the person you knew–just a lot more evil (well maybe not that much more than some of my old friends).
 The association of bats with the legend of human vampires has an uncertain origin, but since the time of Cortez and his Conquistadors, peoples of western civilization have linked vampire bats with the legendary “human” vampires of Transylvania. The writings of William Shakespeare, Robert Louis Stevenson, and others have contributed to legends that cast a veil of fear on people, as they associate bats with graveyards, death, ghosts, and goblins.   http://www.bu.edu/cecb/bat-lab-update/bats/bat-facts-and-folklore/
MODERN VAMPIRES:
Don’t age
Have better hearing and sight and smell.
They can hypnotize mere mortals and sometimes animals–if the Creatures allow them to get that close.
They have bad reaction to sun (this varies in modern stories) and sleep–or even in actuality return to death or a death like suspension during the day—and sleeping in their home soil is usually a part of the resting ritual.
In Greece they have eyebrows that meet in the middle–the evil uni-brow.
Historically, vampirism was most often associated with those who had sinned. Individuals who had committed suicide or who had led an immoral life were strongly suspect (Bunson, p. 20). Until 1823, English law required that all bodies of suicides must be staked before burial to ensure that the victim would not rise from the grave (Florescu & McNally, p. 121). Likewise, individuals who had been excommunicated or who had committed other mortal sins, like murder, were believed to have the ability to turn into vampires (Wright, p. 20).      http://www.dartmouth.edu/~elektra/thesis.html
 
To keep them away try:  Garlic
                                                       Mirrors  they don’t have reflections
                                                                            so why this is I’m not sure
                                                      Crosses —I don’t know what you’d do with
                                                                              Moslem, Jewish or pagan
                                                                              creatures of the night
                                                     Home          The best thing to remember, even
                                                                             if they look like Brad Pitt or Tom
                                                                             Cruise don’t invite them into your
                                                                             dwelling—if you don’t ask, they
                                                                            won’t come.
                                                  Iron  Fences are believed by some to keep the
                                                                           undead in their graves.
                                                  Reciting the Lord’s Prayer is suppose to be
                                                                            helpful
Although well-known and feared worldwide, it appears that the most highly developed vampire mythology originates from Eastern Europe and the Balkans – including the word “vampire” itself – where traditional beliefs held that the body of an evil person will remain uncorrupt after death and as such ready to rise from its grave on certain nights to haunt and terrorise his familiar neighbourhood and its inhabitants until “helped” to find the final rest of his body and soul like any “normal” deceased by drastic methods such as impaling the corpse with wooden stakes, decapitating or burning it.      http://web.stanford.edu/group/rsa/_content/_public/_htm/dracula.shtml
Though they can live forever they are not really immortal as they can be killed by:    Being left out in the sun (though some have good
                                                results with really good sun screen—-say 2000
                                       Stakes through the heart—it is not recommended
                                       to be tried while the Vampire is awake since they
                                       also have superior strength (forgot to mention that
                                       earlier–sorry)
                                      Holy water is also good for Christian vampires it
                                      burns them–or put in it’s soil (it rests in) will also
                                      results in its demise.
                                     A more modern tool is ultraviolet light which
                                     like sunlight burns them up.
Vampire-like spirits called the Lilu are mentioned in early Babylonian demonology, and the even more ancient bloodsucking Akhkharu is discussed in Sumerian mythology. These female demons were said to roam during the hours of darkness, hunting and killing newborn babies and pregnant women. One of the demons, named Lilitu, was later adapted into Jewish demonology as Lilith       http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Vampire
 In the modern world we have the (politically correct) Living  Impaired–not only do we have the bad vampire, but the good one who only fights the bad and just sips from  his or her victims.  Actually associating the vampire with Halloween is very modern with the two being very separate things for hundreds perhaps thousands of years.
More than 120 skeletons, dating between the 7th and 14th century have been found in a cemetery in Western Ireland. What all the ‘deviant burials’ had in common, was that they were found with large stones placed in their mouths. Researchers believe this indicates a widespread and longstanding fear of revenants, and the stones were a practice to prevent the dead from returning as zombies or vampires. As similar find of deviant burials in 2009, included the remains of a 60-year-old woman with a rock thrust in her from the 1500s on the Venetian island of Lazzaretto Nuovo.            http://goldenroom.presspublisher.org/issue/october-2014/article/vampires-zombies-and-jinn-they-re-everywhere
Tomorrow we’ll look at  Bram Stoker, whose classic Dracula revived a flagging interest among Victorians for elegant hosts with curious appetites.
IN all the darkest pages of the malign supernatural there is no more terrible tradition than that of the Vampire, a pariah even among demons. Foul are his ravages; gruesome and seemingly barbaric are the ancient and approved methods by which folk must rid themselves of this hideous pest. Even to-day in certain quarters of the world, in remoter districts of Europe itself, Transylvania, Slavonia, the isles and mountains of Greece, the peasant will take the law into his own bands and utterly destroy the carrion who–as it is yet firmly believed–at night will issue from his unhallowed grave to spread the infection of vampirism throughout the countryside.       http://www.sacred-texts.com/goth/vkk/vkk02.htm
The shrouds used to cover the faces of the dead were often decayed by bacteria in the mouth, revealing the corpse’s teeth, and vampires became known as ‘shroud-eaters.’   http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2153307/Vampires-Venice-Bricks-bones-scared-Medieval-world-undead.html#ixzz3oNCQqwOw
Sources:
Curran, Dr. Bob:  Vampires
Hole,  Christina (Ed.):   The Encyclopedia of Superstitions
Melton, J. Gordon:  The Vampire Book
(Author), Bruce Pennington        Book of the Vampire Hardcover

 

 

ON RICKETY BRIDGES TO SAND SURF AND WITH A FEW GHOSTS FOR GOOD MEASURE

DSCN3391 PICTURE is from Winter Park  http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attractions-g34747-Activities-Winter_Park_Florida.html  and main picture is also from a shop front also in that city.  Didn’t do anything but work yesterday:  Check it out:  https://www.etsy.com/shop/DragonLaire?ref=hdr_shop_menu   HONORABLE MENTION today is Farnsworth House B&B in (yeah right) Mt. Dora    http://www.farnsworthhousebb.com/.  Running away this afternoon tired of spending my days with no company but the TV.               Florida was admitted to United States as a State on March 3, 1845 (27th State) Governor — Rick Scott Capital — Tallahassee Nickname — Sunshine State State Flower — Orange Blossom http://www.stateofflorida.com/facts.aspx                                 MONTEPIER Home of James Madison by SEBRING (1986) Signed Print with Certificate of Authencity

Diana talks about findings in Scotland and some new books she is considering:  THIS CHARACTER MENTIONED HERE WILL BE IN SEASON II OR IF YOU READ THE BOOKS YOU REMEMBER HIM:  http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/08/140808-outlander-scotland-orkney-islands-stonehenge-neolithic/                   Greater Miami is the only metropolitan area in the United States whose borders encompass two national parks. You can hike through pristine Everglades National Park or ride on glass-bottom boats across Biscayne National Park.     http://www.50states.com/facts/florida.htm#.VhfQGtFdHIU               WILLIE NELSON Before His TIme 33 1/3 Vinyl   LP Record 1977

TODAY WE COMPLETE OUR EXPLORATION OF THE SMALLER PLACES IN FLORIDA (CENTRAL EAST COAST) YOU MIGHT ENJOY IF YOU JUST KNEW WHAT WAS THERE:
Take route 520 cross Merrit island to Cocoa Beach
 By the way the first bridge across this area didn’t come tlll 1917 wen the locals constructed a rickety wood one.  One of the first to cross it was an attorney Gus Edwards who gave up law to go into real estate development of  Merritt Island and later Cocoa Beach.
The Bridge to Cocoa Beach wasn’t completed till 5 years later.
Cocoa Beach  Sun, sand and surf in the heart of the space coast.  First Indians who were enslaved by the Spanish (they had a fort–Santa  Lucenda in the area at one time) and after they left so did the Spanish, leaving only their orange groves behind.   The English came and the pirates plundered and finally the Americans who built a lighthouse at the Cape in 1845.  Then came pineapple plantations and they all left and free slaves settled here after the Civil War.  A hurricane in 1885 discouraged settlers.   Then there was a casino which became a hotel (thanks to that attorney turned real estate tycoon) with a boardwalk and finally it was a city in 1925 (well maybe not maybe just a town–had 25 residents but no electricity).  But even another major hurricane (1926) couldn’t chase the mosquitos away.  Now there is a Naval station and a causeway (1940) which brought more, many more tourists.  And eventually came Ron Jon’s and the town was complete.
Points of Interest:
Cameron Barkley Park
Astronaut Memorial Gardens
Sidney Fischer Park

http://www.inbrevard.com/cocoa-beach/parks-and-recreation-guide/163/sidney-fischer-park.html

 

 

Lori Wilson Park     http://www.brevardcounty.us/parksrecreation/central/loriwilson

 

 

 

Cove Park                                                      http://www.inbrevard.com/cocoa-beach/parks-and-recreation-guide/170/cove-park.html

 

 

 

 

Ramp Road Park                                         http://www.inbrevard.com/cocoa-beach/parks-and-recreation-guide/165/ramp-road-park.html

 

 

 

 

 

Offenhauser R. Murkshe Memorial Park                           http://www.inbrevard.com/cocoa-beach/parks-and-recreation-guide/86/robert-p-murkshe-memorial-park.html

 

 

 

 

 

Robert R. Murkshe Memorial Park http://www.brevardcounty.us/ParksRecreation/Central/RobertMurkshe/Home

 

 

 

 

 

Surfside Playhouse                                       http://www.surfsideplayers.com/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Turn right/south on A1A                   Satellite Beach sprang up near the cape and Naval base which you might realize already from the name.

 

 

 

 

of interest

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pelican Beach Park http://www.satellitebeachrecreation.org/Pages/PelicanBeachPark.aspx         Indian Harbor Beach so named in 1955 because of traces of an Indian Village that were found here on the shore of a sheltered cove on the Banana River.

 

 

 

Of Interest

 

 

 

Paradise Beach Park         

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/orl-trav-beachguide-paradise-story.html

 

 

 

 

 

The 11 miles of coast past where we turn next (Melbourne Beach to Sebastian Inlet) is the nation’s largest nesting area for endangered loggerhead sea turtles.  From late May – September  the turtles lay their eggs in he sand.  http://myfwc.com/education/wildlife/sea-turtle/where-to-view/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Turn right/west on 192/500 after Cross the Indian River turn right/north on Route 1 Continue north to

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rockledge named after a rock formation rising as high as 20′ above the water.  It’s popular with snow birds and for both commercial and game fishing.  It was found in 1875 and soon had two hotels that had total capacity for 700 guests.  Flagler’s railroad stopped here while building the line to Palm Beach and it has been a bedroom community for the Space industry.

 

 

 

 

of interest

 

 

 

 

Space Coast Ice Plex     

http://www.spacecoasticeplex.com/#_=_  

 

 

 

Turtle Creek Golf Club  

http://www.golfturtlecreek.com/#_=_    

 

 

 

 

Fineline Fishing Charters

http://finelinefishingcharters.com/#_=_

 

 

 

 

 

Helen and Allan Cruickshank Sanctuary Sanctuary

http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g34593-d8007815-Reviews-Helen_and_Allan_Cruickshank_Sanctuary-Rockledge_Brevard_County_Florida.html

 

 

 

 

Happy Hooves Farm

http://yourhappyhooves.com/#_=_

 

 

Finally on the left side of US 1 you’ll see

 

Ashley’s

http://www.ashleysofrockledge.com/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Because the Ashley’s of Rockledge building is located so close to train tracks, and the main highway, it is theorized that (some of the ghosts could be persons who) … could’ve died either in front of Ashley’s; killed in auto accidents, or killed by a train on the tracks located right behind Ashley’s.

One story tells the tale of a man being dragged down the stairs of Ashley’s in the 1940s, to the police car by officers,”http://www.hauntedhouses.com/states/fl/ashley-rockledge.htm    Since then there have been reports of people almost falling because of their feelings of being dragged down the steps.

10 largest cities (2010): Jacksonville, 836,507; Miami, 399,457; Tampa, 347,645; Orlando, 249,562; St. Petersburg, 246,541; Hialeah, 231,941; Tallahassee, 186,971; Fort Lauderdale, 170,747; Port Saint Lucie, 168,716; Cape Coral, 161,248

Orginal ANIMAL CRACKERS Cookie Jar

STATE SONG:  by Stephen Foster
Old Folks at Home
Way down upon de Swanee Ribber,
Far, far away,
Dere’s wha my heart is turning ebber,
Dere’s wha de old folks stay.
All up and down de whole creation
Sadly I roam,
Still longing for de old plantation,
And for de old folks at home.
2 1/4" Baby DOLL with Minute Croucheted DRESS BEAUTIFUL

FROM BEDROOM TO SPACE WITH CHRISTMAS IN BETWEEN

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This picture is of Mt. Dora Historical Museum in the old Jail http://www.mountdorahistorymuseum.com/ which is fun, interesting and has 3 jail cells—now how many museums can say that.  Main picture is more of my holiday home décor.  Honorable Mention today (also Mt. Dora)  Piece of Mine www.pieceofminehome.com–Unique home accessories and gifts.  Yesterday was mostly work though had another trip to the post office to mail another sold item https://www.etsy.com/shop/DragonLaire?ref=hdr_shop_menu and a stop for groceries—-excitement, excitement.

 

 

 

 

 

Florida’s population:  18,300,000 estimated in 2009. It is the fourth most populous state in the U.S.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LANCESTER Green Depression Glass 2 Handle Bowl with CANE Middle

VANITY FAIR CALLS OUTLANDER WEIRD: 
  Florida has 12 international airports
Still Florida Week:  today it’s places you may not know
Starting on 434 in Seminole Co.
WINTER SPRINGS–read Bedroom community :
“The city was incorporated in 1959 as North Orlando, and it wasn’t until 1972 that it changed its name to Winter Springs. On the basis of land area, it is the largest city in Seminole County now. This city was ranked by the August 2007 issue of Money Magazine as the 31st best place to live in the United States and the 2nd best place to live in the state of Florida.”  http://www.citytowninfo.com/places/florida/winter-springs
IF you continue on 434 you’ll eventually come to
OVEIDO:  Named for a city in Spain.  It began as a settlement in 1869 and got a post office ten years later.

 

 

 

 

 

TURN LEFT (EAST) ON ROUTE 419 (Downtown Oviedo)

 

CHULUOTA.  Indian name which may mean fox den or pine tree (or island).  Interesting fact the names are suppose to be from the Seminole and the Creek—but they are the same tribe (just relocated to Florida the Creeks became Seminoles).
Once a station on Henry Flagler’s long gone railway (ran past Genva, Bithlo, Holopaw and Yeehaw on its way to Okeechobee) over 100 years ago it had an Inn (Lake Catherine) whose guests included Duponts, Dodges, Cabots and Rockefellers.
 
Former (or possibly current) residents include Scott Hall WWF Wrestler and The Pinegrove Bluegrass Band–not to mention its where Sister Sam Volcanic Fire Sauce originated.
Near By:
Little Big Econ State Forrest
Continue on 419 until you come to Route 420.
Turn left/East
Then Right/South on Ft. Christmas Road
Then Left on Route 50 (east again)
CHRISTMAS  this unincorporated blip on the map is one of only 4 in America with this name (there are 5 others that include Christmas in their names)  Named in 1837, when a detachment of U.S. Army troupes, engaged in the war against the war with the Seminoles established a fort about half way down the east coast of Florida.  The fort which took 3 days to build was abandoned 3 months later and eventually burned.  After the Indians moved further south ranchers and some of the former soldiers began to homestead and many of those families still reside in the area.    Today the town sports a permanently decorated Christmas tree and people from all parts of the country send their holiday cards here to get the official post mark “Christmas”.
FORT CHRISTMAS
A replica fort has been built here with a playground and a museum of pioneer
Continue on 50 to US 1
Turn Left–North on 1
TITUSVILLE:  Established after the Civil War by Col. Henry T—wait for it—Titus, who had been a fierce antagonist of John Brown in the struggle over Kansas before the war.  Prior to this it had been called Sandy Point, but Titus as postmaster changed the name.  Titus spent his whole life supporting revolutionaries (including some from Cuba and other south of the border trouble makers) but rumor tells us that his exploits were not so heroic with flights of retreat and discovery in hiding that ended him in Sandy Point during the Civil War where he prospered selling to the Confederate Army and helping (one assumes for a profit) their men dessert to escape execution.  By the end of the war he had a general store, insurance agency and a mule transport team which hauled passengers, mail and produce to and from Lake Harney (closest place to catch a river boat on the St. Johns)  He built a hotel for tourists  (and added a saloon later) where in his later years he would set in his wheelchair with a shotgun and tell the hated northerners of his exploits.  He died in 1881.  When he passed the town boasted two stores and a circuit riding minister as well as another Hotel (the Dixie later renamed Indian River).
Now:
County seat Brevard Co
Gateway to Kennedy Space Center
Merrit Island National Wildlife Refuge
Caneveral National Seashore
Astronaut Hall of Fame
Space Camp USA
Valiant Air Command Museum
Enchanted Forest
Windover Archaeological Site
Turn right (east) on 406
Across the Indian River
MERRIT ISLAND–(Named for Captian Pedro Marrat–Spanish explorer or a Mr. Merritt who planted crops here before 1823.) Douglas Dummett established the first “budded” orange grove in Florida on his estate here in the 1830’s  (grafted from Sweet China Orange buds onto wild sour orange trees).  He was a former militia captain fighting the Seminoles and then lived in a cabin in his grove.  His oranges were prized in New York and after his death in 1873 his oranges went on to be the progenitors of the Indian River Orange.
Of interest:
Black Point Wildlife Drive
Cruickshank Trail
Return to the main land on 405 (right/west)
Turn South /left on 515
Cocoa first house erected here 1881.  The original name of the settlement was Indian River City which the Post Office said was too long.  The current name was selected from a box of Baker’s Cocoa which was delivered to B.C. Willard’s general store while the discussion about a new name was being considered.
Of Interest:
Historic Cocoa Village
Historic Cocoa Village Playhouse
Harry T. & Harriette V. Moore Multi-Cultural Center
Ace of Hearts Ranch
Florida has the longest coastline in the contiguous United States (1,350 miles or 2,170 km), and is the only state in the United States that borders both the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.

55 years before Plymouth Rock and 42 before Jamestown this Was a City (or at least a town)

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This picture is from The Bavarian Haus www.eatatthebavarianhaus.com which I did a review of today on Trip Advisor  http://www.tripadvisor.com/ .   the main is along the street in Mt. Dora  http://southfloridareporter.com/mount-dora-bicycle-festival-is-this-weekend-22889/ and check out the latest on my novel on Pinteresthttps://www.pinterest.com/lindachase56829/my-novels/    or buy something from my storehttps://www.etsy.com/shop/DragonLaire?ref=hdr_shop_menu

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sometimes legends make reality, and become more useful than the facts.    Salman Rushdie

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5" Colonial Couple Made in OCCUPIED JAPAN Porcelain

I LOVE THE SCOTS—they even have Outlander down:

 

 

 

 

TODAY we continue with FLORIDA with today’s LEGENDARY ST. AUGUSTINE

 

I love this old city with all the latest gadgets to keep those of us that are use to the new comfortable.   I didn’t want to do a St. Augustine legends since the city which despite history books to the contrary was the original settlement in what is now the USA.  But that isn’t the only first this city had.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Legends die hard. They survive as truth rarely does.   Helen Hayes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FORT MOSE  :  Just two miles (or so north of town) is Fort Mose  http://www.fortmose.org/ (real name was Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose) it was the first (at least legally sanctioned) free Black community to be founded inside the present United States.  Established in 1738 by the Spanish Governor of Florida and provided a refuge for slaves that escaped from the English colonies.  There were originally 100 persons (20 households) who lived here.  (National Historic Landmark and featured on Black Heritage Trail).

 

 

 

 

“The enclave was the first line of defense between the Spanish settlers in Florida and their enemies, the English colonists to the north in Carolina (which did not officially split into North and South Carolina until 1729, and then the Southern part of South Carolina split in 1732 to form Georgia). Fort Mose was manned entirely by armed black men, under the leadership of Francisco Menendez, who became the leader of the black militia there in 1726. It deserves to be remembered as…  the headquarters of the first black armed soldiers commanded by a black officer, who actively engaged in military combat with English colonists from the Carolinas and Georgia.  Menendez, the first African-American military commander….”  http://www.pbs.org/wnet/african-americans-many-rivers-to-cross/history/what-was-americas-1st-black-town/

 

 

 

To learn more about Blacks and Colonial Florida/Spanish:  Black Society in Spanish Florida (Blacks in the New World) by Jane Landers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Legends are material to be moulded, and not facts to be recorded.  Hervey Allen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE OLD DRUGSTORE was the location of Old City Remedies for several years now, but I just saw where they are no longer operating there as the building was sold….I checked but can’t find out to whom or for what purpose.  The building on the corner of Orange and Cordova street has been in operation (as a drug store originally) since 1887.  It later became a museum with a courtyard snack bar and most recently a wonderful place to get herbals and natural remedies as well as a gift shop and restaurant….I’ll be on the look out as to what it’s new reincarnation is.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Legends are all to do with the past and nothing to do with the present.   Lauren Bacall

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE LIGHTHOUSE was the first one in Florida–well not this one, but close.  The Spanish put a wooden watch tower in this area to help guide ships past what they called bancos locos (crazy banks) the ever shifting sands.  In 1824 the tower became Florida’s first lighthouse.  The current tower didn’t make its appearance until 1875 (after the bancos locos threatened to collapse the old tower) and included a brick house where light keepers and their families lived and worked (until 1955).  The house (after a fire) was rebuilt to it’s original splendor.  Now automated the light is still an active beacon and the beam can be seen for 19 nautical miles.  The house is now a museum and you can go up to the top of the light for a fantastic view of the island (it’s on Anastasia just south of St. Augustine)  http://www.staugustinelighthouse.com/.

 

 

 

A star turn on the SyFy series Ghost Hunters has brought street cred to this lighthouse in America’s oldest city, and the Dark of the Moon Paranormal Tour (billed as “all ghost, no gimmicks”) http://www.staugustinelighthouse.com/events/darkofmoon.html leaves you wondering if the place is, indeed, cursed. Since 1874, when several members of a family, including children, were accidentally killed during the lighthouse’s construction, a long list of folks have claimed to have witnessed strange happenings, from voices on the staircase to the wafting scent of cigar smoke to a ghost-like man in the basement.  http://communitytable.parade.com/168230/minitime/5-haunted-lighthouses-to-climb-if-you-dare/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Literature – Eastern and Western – abounds with stories, myths, legends about the search for youth, for eternal life.  F. Sionil Jose

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE FIRST MASS in the USA was offered here , at least near in what was to become the first Parish as well.  The Shrine of Our Lady of La Leche Mission  The mission grounds are both historic and peaceful, a lovely reminder of a time long ago. Unfortunately it was also a time when Christians fought each other  for not just land but for who had the right of the sect.  But we’ve (for the most part) gotten over that and this is where Christianity first came to the new world.

 

 

 

 

“The present chapel dates from 1914 and is a replica of earlier coquina chapels. It houses a replica of the statue of Our Lady of La Leche and provides visitors with a quiet place to pray.  For a more extensive history of the Shrine of Our Lady of La Leche and Mission Nombre de Dios, visit www.missionandshrine.org. There you will find information on the facilities of the Mission and Shrine, educational tours for pilgrimages and school groups, The Shrine Gift Shop and the Mission Museum”  http://www.dosafl.com/shrine-of-our-lady-of-la-leche/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finally the First Protestant (Huguenot) Cemetery in Territorial Florida  http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=1841297    This considerable plot just north of the Old City Gates the last burial document here was 1884, 63 years after it was established in 1821.  Persons buried here (120 known graves) include a wealthy sugar plantation owner a historian who did significant research on Florida and another first—the first federal judge of the then Florida territory.  There are of course victims of the 1821 yellow fever epidemic–which is why the cemetery was initially established.  Also the vicar of the Trinity Episcopal Church http://www.trinityepiscopalparish.org/ (oldest Protestant Church in Florida—it’s still standing on the corner of St. George and Kings Streets) .   There is also a Catholic Cemetery (Tolomato   http://www.tolomatocemetery.com/) one block west of this plot, but inside the city gate.  Some seem to think that in the prominently Catholic city it was felt that those buried here were outsiders and not as important as those inside.  https://www.facebook.com/FriendsoftheHuguenotCemetery
“Tolomato Cemetery …was in use as a cemetery from the 18th century until 1884. This beautiful space is the last resting place of some 1,000 St. Augustinians, including many people important to the history of Florida and the United States.  It is a distillation of St Augustine history in less than one acre, starting with the First Spanish Period, when Tolomato was a Franciscan mission, and going through its use as a cemetery during the British Period and the Second Spanish Period and then on through Florida’s Territorial and early Statehood periods.   The cemetery is open to the public once a month. ”       http://www.tolomatocemetery.com/
Open Free of Charge to the Public on the Third Saturday of each Month:
11 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.Saturday, October 17, 2015Saturday, November 21, 2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

This building set a precedence for St. Augustine and began the Moorish Spanish revival of architecture that is seen throughout the city today.

Key West to me was a topical paradise—Author Gloria Swanson

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First off the above picture–I took it in Mt. Dora this weekend and I promised the lovely lady she would be on my blog.  So here you are my dear…..best décor on a pony tail anywhere ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Busy this last week.  Friday I took off for cleaning and decorating (as in Halloween style) for a wine tasting Friday night–had a riot and drank some good wine.  http://prpwine.com/ .  Sat. it was a leisurely trip about Mt. Dora (The picture is One Flight Up    https://www.facebook.com/OneFlightUp where we stopped for dessert and coffee—-100 more inches on my thighs but worth every miniscule.).  Sat. night Cooper Rocket to hear my nephew’s group STRAIGHT JACKET https://www.facebook.com/straightjacketofficial  Took it easy on Sunday which is my one day of rest and have been to post office posting stuff I sold this weekend:  https://www.etsy.com/shop/DragonLaire?ref=hdr_shop_menu   Honorable mention for the day Village Antique Mall in Mt. Dora www.villageantiquemall.com

SPECIAL NOTE:  THIS WAS SUPPOSE TO GO OUT YESTERDAY BUT MY SITE WENT DOWN AND JUST GOT IT BACK OUT THIS MORNING–SORRY.  (Main picture is my kitchen–on top of my refrigerator).

 

 

 

 

 

. “The plum-colored night sky was shifting to pink to make room for the day, which looked as though it might turn out “glorious and whimsical,” as the Key West Citizen had promised.”
Author: Lucy Burdette

 

 

 

LITTLE Things Mean A Lot FIGURINE Avon 1983

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IF YOU like Sexy YOU’LL love this show

 

 

Check out a review on Sexy Outlander:

http://www.racked.com/2015/4/3/8337381/outlander-returns-starz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 “I’d love to try to sell a blank white canvas to an art dealer. And when he asks what it is, I’d tell him, “It’s a landscape painting of Key West, from the perspective of an optimistic blind man.””
Author: Jarod Kintz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Country Boy wotj  Goat & Girl with Goose Figurines

THIS WEEK I THOUGHT I’D DO FLORIDA:
DAY I:  THE LOST LEGENDS OF KEY WEST
 THE COPA WENT OUT IN IN A BIG WAY
The original Copa ended in an arson-sparked (some say) fire in 1995.  Word has it that the music was still going on, while it burned.  The Miami Herald described the burning as:  “Ten Years of Debauchery Goes Up In Flames”.  In it’s a day it was described as the Hottest Spot North of Cuba.  Up until that time it had been one of the island’s (Key West) most infamous gay establishment and a legend in its own time.  It was a late-night place and some say embodied what Key West really was.
The Legendary Club was born in 1982 in a former Porno movie theater becoming a gay cruise site on Duval, Key West’s main drag and was Key West’s only Disco scene in the 80s and continued to be the place to be seen in the early 90’s.  While there was dancing downstairs the upstairs held male erotic video showings.  There were theme parties (Doris Day for instance) to die for and the people watching was out of sight.  Oh and don’t forget the wet jockey short contests.   If you’d been there you’d also remember long lines up to “Pinkie’s” ticket window.  It was a place of multiple bars, including the one called a Key West experience, the Garden Bar and Ray worked the the door.    And don’t forget the fights which police, who said they don’t miss the place, assured us were many.
You can still get tees with the Club on it:  https://longlosttees.com/shop/copa/
Yes, Barometer was written in Key West and I did spend many hours at the library there. Every song on that album has a literary connection.
(Jimmy Buffett)
HOUSEBOAT ROW THE LAST BASTION OF REAL LAID-BACK IN KEY WEIRD
The locals called it “The Row” and for years it was one of the reassuring sites that Key West hadn’t “sold out” to the establishment.   It had long been an eye sore for the city and numerous efforts were made to evict the squatters who stayed here in all manner of old and newer house boats.  This came to a vote in 1997 when voters referendum where 70% of the voters voted in favor of the boats along the sea wall, and stopped the city’s efforts to evict them.  Unfortunately their previous efforts had brought it all to the attention of the state who’s land it was that the boat rested over…the state being the unforgiving creatures that it is,  made every effort to remove the resident and the courts upheld heir right to do so–well I say Every but in truth they did not cut the ties of the vessels and tow them away for fear of a major confrontation from the squatter.
It took George–as in hurricane—in September 1998,
 
to strike the death blow (though it was still a slow death) to the resistance.  “… but as time went by the residents of Houseboat Row were pretty much your average working class Key West people. Which was reason enough to get rid of them. The last of the house boats was hauled away in 2002 and all that’s left now is an empty seawall…”http://conchscooter.blogspot.com/2008/03/houseboat-row.html
As to the survivors:  some washed up at Garrison Bight ( Bight is an indentation in a coastline, or a loop in a length of rope) where you can still see their distinctive presence, but buried in the 250 side by side, orderly procession it is clear that another of Key West’s claims to being a hold out to the rest of Florida is if not gone on a rapid slide in that direction.
Tony Tarracino (August 10, 1916 – November 1, 2008, commonly called Captain Tony, was an American saloonkeeper, boat captain, politician, gambler, and storyteller in Key West, Florida. He was a well-known personality in the city and has been called “arguably the city’s most beloved resident” and “the conscience of Key West.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Tarracino
 Captain Tony Tarracino’s hitch hiked  from Elizabeth, N.J. down to the end of the road in Key West.  And for him it seemed to have been a great choice because eventually he acquired a Saloon (by the same name) the Mayor’s job (he lost the first time)and  from there went on to sell the Saloon (which still has the same name) and  become a living legend serving as the Mayor Emeritus of Key West, not to mentioned being immortalized in song by another island legend (Last Mango in Paris by Jimmy Buffett) who was also his campaign manager the year he won the Mayor’s job (he lost the first time).  Oh and he appeared in a movie–as a character, not actually acted:  Tarracino was portrayed by Stuart Whitman in Cuba Crossing, a 1980 movie about adventurers who get caught up in a plot to kill Fidel Castro.  In “real” life:   he had several wives and was married to his fourth, Marty, for 38 years at the time of his death.  He fathered 13 children, including former Survivor: The Australian Outback contestant, Keith Famie. His youngest child, Tony Tarracino Jr., was born when Captain Tony was age 70. He outlived his first three wives, Mimi, Mae, and Shirley, and one of his sons.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Tarracino
The Saloon is still there, he sold it years before his departure from the isle–wonder where he hitch hiked to this time—just down from the corner that holds Sloppy Joe’s (that once was housed in this same building).  But while Sloppy’s has pretty much sold out to the establishment of tourist seeking on Duval Street, Tony’s with a tree growing through it’s roof, and the hundreds, may haps thousands of dollars and business cards interspersed with an occasional under garment or other bizarre item that line the ceiling and part of the walls like offerings to some tipsy  deities of consumption mark the place as holding some of the spirit of its old owner and holds a reminder of the lost legend he is.
If you’d like to know more about Tony—there’s even a book about him:  Life Lessons of a Legend Paperback – September 26, 2008

 

“All you need in this life is a tremendous sex drive and a great ego – brains don’t mean a shit.” – Captain Tony

 

 

 

 

 

CARDINAL Figurine #6350 by Andrea for SADEK

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Today’s the Day!”

 

 

 

 

 

Sources:

The Florida Keys: A History & Guide Tenth Edition

“If you leave a woman, though, you probably ought to shoot her.” Earnest Hemingway

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Happy OCTOBER–home of Halloween my favorite day of all…….yesterday had a couple of drink at a nearby watering hole—nice break from the house.  Met some lovely ladies and we gabbed for awhile before I headed home.  Picture above is from The Gate House   http://www.lakeside-inn.com/the-gatehouse in Mt. Dora (again yes–love Mt. Dora) http://www.visitmountdora.com/  Life has been busy lately and I bounce around a lot but it keeps me out of trouble which is an accomplishment all in itself.   Honorable Mention:  Bookstore Welcome Center Casadaga.  http://www.cassadaga.org/bookstore.htm

 

 

 

 

 

“My publisher, who was so good as a taster and editor, when she became a writer, lo and behold, it was all this feminine tosh.”   V.S. Naipaul

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Country Boy wotj  Goat & Girl with Goose Figurines

54d3f7e7c48dcc1b34505020_kissclairejamie
where did you learn to kiss like that???????????????????????
Check out Claire as Protagonist:
http://www.avclub.com/review/outlander-letter-perfect-historical-fantasy-207758
HOW ABOUT TEACHING ME?
“Women are the rails on which men run.”  Saul Bellow
Can we ever discuss woman without leaving out her relationship with men.  I personally like Hepburn’s idea of not living together but just visiting from time to time.
“There are only a half dozen men of letters (and no women) worth printing.”  T.S. Eliot
Whether they’ve Biblical, Fictional or Factual we are bombarded with couples…those that started the world, those that died rather than be apart and those that if they actually did break up would totally wreck the tabloids planned front pages for years.
Until just recently not being a couple, specifically a married one was awkward for the women.  When I was growing up titles like “Maiden Aunt” and “Old Maid” were still being used—one to explain why your mom’s sister was still living at home.  Back before women generally earned a living (let alone had a career) these unattached ladies were generally part of the family burdens–most of them living with family members.  I remember a widowed brother and “Old Maid” sister lived on in the family home (she actually was a midwife and helped deliver me–West Va. even for my age was way behind the norm in such things at that time).  Women had a place and it was in the kitchen and that included the maidens as well as the wife.
The alternative for that was mistress—in royal and rich society these unattached women lived well and often had positions of power, but let them fall from grace and they often fell to the wrath of society when no longer protected by the rich and powerful.  Kings like Henry VIII and other often arranged for marriages , when they became with child or were replaced, to courtiers who were willing to take the “damaged goods” in return for a rise in position, getting the notice of the king or sometimes even land and other considerations.  In some cases they even eventually married them as in the Swynford case: ” Widowed at twenty-one, Katherine became John of Gaunt’s mistress and then, after many twists of fortune, his bride in a scandalous marriage.”  http://www.amazon.com/Mistress-Monarchy-Katherine-Swynford-Lancaster/dp/0345453247
“Look, am I going to sit and weep every time a young hooker feels as though she’s been taken advantage of?”  Gore Vidal
The concept of Romantic Love is relatively new as customs go:  When you look at it from Psychology Today’s point of view: “I suggest that the evolutionary history of human romantic love may have progressed along the following lines. As human brains grew and infants became needier and more vulnerable for a longer period of development, such that the father’s involvement and bi-parental care became necessary, natural selection had to come up with a way to motivate men and women to stay together for as long as it took to raise a child successfully.”   Is really a bit depressing, and very biological, but on the other hand serving a very necessary function in the biological area.  And leaves those of us without children with not even that alternative.
I think that our romantic ideas really got started in medieval times–one of the reasons that we are so  seduced with Knights like Lancelot saving  us from the dismal disaster of our love life, or lack there-of and reinforcing our ideas that there really must be more to a relationship than what we had or even have.“The romantic love of knights and damsels, called courtly love, emerged in the early medieval ages (eleventh century France), derived from Platonic, Aristotelian love, and the writings of the Roman poet, Ovid (and his ars amatoria). Such romantic love was often portrayed as not to be consummated, but as transcendentally motivated by a deep respect for the lady and earnestly pursued in chivalric deeds rather than through sexual relations.” http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Romantic_love 

 

 

It used to be you got married, you had kids, you married off your children and then you clung to each other in old age with spouses often dying within a year or less of each other.  Life was not always happy but you made do and struggled on and divorce was a dirty word like intercourse and ejaculate.  Though some couples lived I’m sure in agony, many others tried harder and made an effort to adjust and accommodate.  But before you think I’m head over heals from this time not so long past I must admit that I understand that it was often the women who made the most effort and took the brunt of “adjusting” as she was the woman and expected to be more or less the less important party in deciding where one lived, the husband’s compliance to the marital obligation and so on and so forth.

 

 

 

 

 

 

A little bit of rape is good for a man’s soul.”  Norman Mailer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I tried dating on line and didn’t know whether to laugh cry or become a hermit after only 3 tries:  “Digital wooing helps people to behave like scoundrels. Among the hundreds of people interviewed for “Modern Romance”, many admitted to becoming addicted to dating sites. One woman confessed to having hunted for better-looking alternatives while en route to a first date. Others talked about the ease of starting affairs or snooping on partners. Countless women complained of receiving messages from aspiring Lotharios that ranged from lewd to asinine. Requests to “hang out” do not make the heart go aflutter.”  http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21657362-luv-u-l8r

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maybe I’m old fashioned to want more than the modern world offers:  I can deal with less people getting married, but these short term trains of women and men meeting, hooking up, getting knocked up or not and sooner or later breaking up to be repeated on and on till he can’t get it up or she is over it all or doesn’t have any room for any more kids, just seems to be a useless exercise in self centered  lack of commitment that shouldn’t surprise me given the general population that who when with real friends tend to spend more time texting and looking through email and face book on their phones than carrying on conversations.  People who text in the car and on the streets which result in injuries and death in car accidents and those text junkie pedestrians as well.  We call people we have never met except in the sterility of online our friends and spend our lives bitching on Face Book on how lonely we are.   And we’re not happy about it…..we cry over the lack of love and relationships, at least a lot of the women I know do and yet we accept and even embrace the source of our doom.

 

 

 

 

 

I do not want us to go back to the day of stay together no matter what,  but  even though we have reached the point (more or less) where one parent can raise the child and thus sever the biological imperative for our relationships and attachment, can our world not have a place for loving and caring individuals who can become loving and caring partners?  Obviously if me and all the Outlander Ladies out there who are devoted to Jamie Fraser because he’s loving, and caring but still masculine, are any indication,  the idea hasn’t gone out of style yet…however the fact that Diana Galbadon placed him in the 18th century may well tell you her opinion of that idea.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Don’t wait for the good woman. She doesn’t exist.”    Charles Bukowski

 

 

 

 

 

OCCUPIED JAPAN--Singing Children Figurine Copy of Hummel Figurines

“The only thing in life is language. Not love. Not anything else”      Richard Burton

 

 

 

 

CARDINAL Figurine #6350 by Andrea for SADEK

 

 

 

 

DRAGONS BRING TREASURERS BACK TO THEIR CAVES