EK’s Star Log

Entries from July 2007

Pluto & Eris

Sunday, July 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Answers.com says:

Spotlight: Easy come, easy go. On this date in 2005, astronomers announced the discovery of Eris, a heavenly body slightly larger than Pluto, and called it the 10th planet. The International Astronomical Union did a little further research and decided that both bodies were too small to be official planets; both Eris and Pluto were demoted to the official designation of dwarf planet. Along with its moon, Dysnomia, Eris is the most distant known object in orbit around the sun.

Dwarf Planet Eris
Dwarf Planet Eris
Source

Quote: “Mmm. Lost a planet, Master Obi-Wan has. How embarrassing. How embarrassing.” — Yoda, Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones

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Categories: History · science fiction

Pluto & Eris

Sunday, July 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Answers.com says:

Spotlight: Easy come, easy go. On this date in 2005, astronomers announced the discovery of Eris, a heavenly body slightly larger than Pluto, and called it the 10th planet. The International Astronomical Union did a little further research and decided that both bodies were too small to be official planets; both Eris and Pluto were demoted to the official designation of dwarf planet. Along with its moon, Dysnomia, Eris is the most distant known object in orbit around the sun.

Dwarf Planet Eris
Dwarf Planet Eris
Source

Quote: “Mmm. Lost a planet, Master Obi-Wan has. How embarrassing. How embarrassing.” — Yoda, Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Categories: History · science fiction

Pluto & Eris

Sunday, July 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Answers.com says:

Spotlight: Easy come, easy go. On this date in 2005, astronomers announced the discovery of Eris, a heavenly body slightly larger than Pluto, and called it the 10th planet. The International Astronomical Union did a little further research and decided that both bodies were too small to be official planets; both Eris and Pluto were demoted to the official designation of dwarf planet. Along with its moon, Dysnomia, Eris is the most distant known object in orbit around the sun.

Dwarf Planet Eris
Dwarf Planet Eris
Source

Quote: “Mmm. Lost a planet, Master Obi-Wan has. How embarrassing. How embarrassing.” — Yoda, Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Categories: History
Tagged:

Ice Cream History

Saturday, July 14, 2007 · Leave a Comment

According to Answers.com:

A famous American saying goes, “I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream!” Tom Carvel set up the first permanent ice-cream stand in 1934, when the truck from which he had been selling the frozen treat had a flat tire near a pottery store in New York. He sold his ice cream from that spot — off the back of his truck — for two years, until he finally bought the store in 1936 and turned it into an ice-cream parlor. That same year, he developed a formula for soft serve ice cream. In 1947, Carvel set up his first franchise, and, soon after, he ran a series of franchising seminars, nicknamed “Sundae School.” Carvel was born on this date in 1906. Quote: “If you like ice cream, why stop at one scoop? Have two, have three. Too much is never enough.” — Morris Lapidus
See previous Highlights

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Categories: History

Ice Cream History

Saturday, July 14, 2007 · Leave a Comment

According to Answers.com:

A famous American saying goes, “I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream!” Tom Carvel set up the first permanent ice-cream stand in 1934, when the truck from which he had been selling the frozen treat had a flat tire near a pottery store in New York. He sold his ice cream from that spot — off the back of his truck — for two years, until he finally bought the store in 1936 and turned it into an ice-cream parlor. That same year, he developed a formula for soft serve ice cream. In 1947, Carvel set up his first franchise, and, soon after, he ran a series of franchising seminars, nicknamed “Sundae School.” Carvel was born on this date in 1906. Quote: “If you like ice cream, why stop at one scoop? Have two, have three. Too much is never enough.” — Morris Lapidus
See previous Highlights

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Categories: History

Why I Write Horror

Friday, July 13, 2007 · Leave a Comment

It has been asked of me, more than once, by multiple peoples:

    “How can someone like you, who loves peace, non-violence, and animals; how can you write the horrible things you do in your books?”

This question is most often presented after someone reads about either The Lansquin or The Red Dragon, the two vivisecting blood crazed villains from The Twighlight Manor series.

My answer to that question: As writers we write what we know. Every writer will tell you that they get their ideas from events of their own lives. I am no different than they. As my fans, friends, and family all know, I am more outspoken for animals rights than the average animal rights activist.

Ask anyone who knows me personally, and they will warn you to stay clear of that subject with me. They warn you for good reason. I was only 6 years old when I began my early protests. I lived on a chicken farm. We ate chicken. One day when I was 6 years old it occurred to me that my beloved babies in the yard and the food on the table were both called chicken, because they were in fact the very same thing. I stopped eating chicken and turkey that same day. About a year later I found out that steak was cow, and I stopped eating that as well. By the time I was 8 years old I had become a devote vegan, and have been so ever since. What does this have to do with me writing horror? I’m getting to that.

As most of you know, I had already written the first 2 volumes of The Twighlight Manor series by the time I was 8 years old. Those early stories of cute talking animals and Herbie-esce living cars, were markedly different from the later rewrites that dripped of horror and blood. Friends Are Forever, originally written in 1978, has undergone 3 major rewrites since it’s first creation, each more grim than the last. Why?

By 1982, I heard news stories of a young girl who refused to dissect frogs in science class. The school expelled her, even though she was only 12 years old. The story mesmerized me. It was one of the few times in my life that I became truly interested in watching the news. I began to tell anyone I could about the evils of frog dissection.

When I was 12 years old, I was with my mom, while she was visiting one of her Avon customers. Who was also one of Maine’s most dramatic and outspoken PETA members. I listened for 2 hours as she retold her latest adventures of rescuing a circus donkey, followed by her latest craze: she was hell bent on telling the world about the horrors of a company known as Proctor & Gamble. It was the first time I had ever heard of them. At this time, almost no one knew anything about P&G’s vivisection and Draize testing, as the horror of this fact had only been just discovered that same year. My mom and me went home that day with a carload of pamphlets about PETA and animal rights and how evil animal testing was.

Over the next few months, I sent for every free pamphlet, brochure, magazine, and catalog I could find about the animal rights movement. By the end of the year, the first revision of volume one of The Twighlight Manor series, Friends Are Forever, had been written. Into the series had been added a new set of characters. The cars were no longer living cars, but now had owners who had taken on the characteristics the cars had had. That same year I would start writing The Wild Years.

the new characters included also a new planet into The Twighlight Manor solar system: Planet Diona, and its formidable scientists who had infiltrated the earth. Testing lab scientists on Earth, were no longer humans, but now aliens. A later, rewrite would change this, and instead of animals, the alien scientist would do word for word everything that P&G did, only my scientist would do it to humans.

In 1993, The Twighlight Manor series took its final turn, becoming what it is known as today, when the addition of a prime villain known as The Lansquin was added to the series. The Lansquin was everything in my book that Proctor and Gamble was in real life. Every bloody glorified horror straight from the laboratories of Proctor & Gamble went straight into my books, under the guise of a deranged madmen bent of torturing every human to cross his path. His reason? For the good of science. For the good of mankind.

And that is how I came to write horror.

Though I write a wide range of other things, including children’s books and romance, it is for my Twighlight Manor series and it’s M rated graphic tales of horror that I am most well known. Yes, I love animals. Yes, I hate war and promote world peace. Yes, I abhor fighting and violence. And yes, I write some of the most graphic tales of gore ever written. Why? It is because I love animals and hate fighting that I write what I do: to open readers’ eyes, so that they too, may come to hate fighting and love peace. Peace for all, including peace for those who cannot speak for themselves. I speak for the animals. I write the tales they themselves cannot tell. I write in memory of those who died for the name of science, for the good of mankind. That is why I write horror, so that the animal who have died at the hands of P&G scientists, may not have died in vain.

~~Wendy.

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Writing Maine Slang

Wednesday, July 11, 2007 · 5 Comments

black birdfall leaves centerblack bird

in Maine, every thing is “wicked good” instead of “cool”

Maine slang is in some ways similar to other NE slang, but it more closely matches Canadian slang. Also, use of French words, in place of English words (even by English only speakers) is not uncommon, due to the fact that Maine is a predominantly French community. Mainers tend to have a more Canadian and less American accent when they talk, and use grammar pronunciations like the French language rather than the English language, accenting syllables and phrases the way a French Canadian would rather than the way an American would.

Also, you need to understand, that in Maine, it’s not just a case of slang. In Maine you are dealing with people who do not like being forced to become Americans simply because America decided to chop off a piece of Quebec and call it the state of Maine.

If you choose to write a Maine character, you’ll need a lot more than slang to pull off the “Maine feel”. This is referring to Native Mainers (one who was born in Maine, to parents born in Maine, to parents born in Maine.) You must be a third generation Mainer to be considered a Native Mainer, with fifth generation being preferred. Any one born in Maine, with less than a third generation pedigree is considered an “outsider” and is referred to as one who lives in Maine, but not a Native Mainer.

Note too, that Mainers have a bad attitude towards outsiders who come in from other US states. Other countries is one thing, but other US states are not greeted with welcome arms. The Native Maine view of American invaders is very low. Note too, that most “old timers” do not consider themselves to be American and will correct you and say that they are a Mainer not an American. Read on and I’ll explain while making note of some of the more common Maine “slang”.

Mainers will point , laugh and say you are “a tourist from Mass of 2 Shits” if you use the phrase “You know what I mean?”

multi generation Mainers tend to hate EVERYone whose great grand daddy wasn’t born in Maine… and if you left Maine even for the summer you’ll get pegged as an “outsider”

lobsta wars between fishing towns get wild and bloody.

note we say lobsta not lobster; everything that ends in -er or -or is pronounced with an -a instead. Stephen King lives in Banga not Bangor.

‘r’, -’er’, and ‘h’ tend to be dropped.

All sentences end with an “eh?” wither we was asking a question or not: “Nice day we ‘a having. eh?”

the become tha

everything is “a getting”

blueberries are bluebear-ras “Looks like tha bluebear-ras ‘a getting ripe, eh?”

big stores are always new, even if they’ve been there for 20 years. In 75% of the towns in Maine it is illegal to build a “big store”, so WalMarts and the like a pretty rare outside of York and Cumberlain counties.

“She’s ‘a getting a new dress down at tha new WalMart”

we never use street names, so no one ever bothers to fix road signs when they fall over or get stolen, cause one one used them anyways.

“Ya take a left at Turn’as Pond, and drive till ya get to tha red house that my grand daddy painted blue five years back, an ya turn down tha dirt road… ya all see the stump where the squirral used ta sit every day? Ya wanna go abouts five miles after that, but tha squiraal got run over by one of thems Mass of 2 Shits tourist drivers so ya won’t see him, just tha stump…”

It’s said ya not you

we use folk instead of people.

note that if your MC is from out of state and going to school in Maine, she’ll get labeled the “new folk” and likely well find no one willing to talk with her, sit with her, or include her…. the rift between native Mainers and “new folks” “tourists” and most esp “folks from Mass of 2 Shits” is big… very very big… and feuding can become bad in the more remote Northern regions shoot-outs with hunting rifles and burning down folks houses is alarmingly common in places like Hansville Woods, Milo, Palmira… my uncle who was from Maine, but moved to Utah for 10 years, and than moved back to Maine, is considered a traitor to his home state and has had his house burned to the ground twice in 4 years). Police are no help and very likely to have been involved. It’s not uncommon for the police to respond to such events with comments like “well that’s what happens.”

In big cities of Southern Maine, like Biddeford, Saco, or Portland, you don’t see this kind of thing too much anymore, but in most smaller towns it’s still pretty bad. Keep in mind too that most smaller towns have less than 1,000 people living in them, and there can be over a mile between house… Maine is one of the biggest states, but has one of the lower populations. When we say our neighbor down the road, we could mean 5 or 10 miles away.

There is a lot of still unexplored old growth forest in Maine. Mountain people do exist. Many families go for years without contact with non-family members. Uniques family lingo’s and weird “twinlige” slang results. This is only seen in the very far North, however, and is not as common as it was 20 years ago.

The only “outsiders” that Maine folk like and welcome are the French Canadians. Every year Maine and Quebec get together and vote to leave the unions and join forces. Every year US gov and Canada gov over throws the votes. Native Mainers hate being part of the US and Quebec hates being part of Canada….

reason: Maine was originally part of Quebec. Quebec being it’s own country separate from Canada. In the 1880’s Canada and the US ripped Quebec in half and each took a part of it. The lower part became the state of Maine. That happened barely 100 years ago, so there are still a lot of folks alive who remember that Maine was not always a US state, and they feel that the US is a greedy gov and hate being a part of it. THIS is why whenever folks come to Maine from out of state, they get the cold shoulder. As a general rule if you come to Maine from any place in the US outside of Maine, you are going to be treated like an invader, because that’s the view Mainers have of outsiders.

Maine is like another country, because 100 years ago, it was another country and most Native Mainers feel that they were not given a choice in the matter when they were suddenly forced to become part of the US.

Never try to write a Mainer character unless you can pull off the anti-non-Mainer attitude, cause it won’t be believable

This info comes to you from one who lives on land that was settled by my family in 1657 (who married into the Native tribe, whom lived here thousands of years before that), and we are one of the few families in all of the US that still lives on their original land. My family is very strong in the pro-Maine, anti-outsider movement.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

———-
Publishing Methods
How to Start a Publishing Company
Creating Character Profiles
Secrets To Writing Success
How To Make a Lord Sesshomaru Costume

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

black birdfall leaves centerblack bird

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Categories: Canada · France · Just For Writers · Maine · Maineland · Old Orchard Beach · writing advice

Writing Maine Slang

Wednesday, July 11, 2007 · Leave a Comment

black birdfall leaves centerblack bird

in Maine, every thing is “wicked good” instead of “cool”

Maine slang is in some ways similar to other NE slang, but it more closely matches Canadian slang. Also, use of French words, in place of English words (even by English only speakers) is not uncommon, due to the fact that Maine is a predominantly French community. Mainers tend to have a more Canadian and less American accent when they talk, and use grammar pronunciations like the French language rather than the English language, accenting syllables and phrases the way a French Canadian would rather than the way an American would.

Also, you need to understand, that in Maine, it’s not just a case of slang. In Maine you are dealing with people who do not like being forced to become Americans simply because America decided to chop off a piece of Quebec and call it the state of Maine.

If you choose to write a Maine character, you’ll need a lot more than slang to pull off the “Maine feel”. This is referring to Native Mainers (one who was born in Maine, to parents born in Maine, to parents born in Maine.) You must be a third generation Mainer to be considered a Native Mainer, with fifth generation being preferred. Any one born in Maine, with less than a third generation pedigree is considered an “outsider” and is referred to as one who lives in Maine, but not a Native Mainer.

Note too, that Mainers have a bad attitude towards outsiders who come in from other US states. Other countries is one thing, but other US states are not greeted with welcome arms. The Native Maine view of American invaders is very low. Note too, that most “old timers” do not consider themselves to be American and will correct you and say that they are a Mainer not an American. Read on and I’ll explain while making note of some of the more common Maine “slang”.

Mainers will point , laugh and say you are “a tourist from Mass of 2 Shits” if you use the phrase “You know what I mean?”

multi generation Mainers tend to hate EVERYone whose great grand daddy wasn’t born in Maine… and if you left Maine even for the summer you’ll get pegged as an “outsider”

lobsta wars between fishing towns get wild and bloody.

note we say lobsta not lobster; everything that ends in -er or -or is pronounced with an -a instead. Stephen King lives in Banga not Bangor.

‘r’, -’er’, and ‘h’ tend to be dropped.

All sentences end with an “eh?” wither we was asking a question or not: “Nice day we ‘a having. eh?”

the become tha

everything is “a getting”

blueberries are bluebear-ras “Looks like tha bluebear-ras ‘a getting ripe, eh?”

big stores are always new, even if they’ve been there for 20 years. In 75% of the towns in Maine it is illegal to build a “big store”, so WalMarts and the like a pretty rare outside of York and Cumberlain counties.

“She’s ‘a getting a new dress down at tha new WalMart”

we never use street names, so no one ever bothers to fix road signs when they fall over or get stolen, cause one one used them anyways.

“Ya take a left at Turn’as Pond, and drive till ya get to tha red house that my grand daddy painted blue five years back, an ya turn down tha dirt road… ya all see the stump where the squirral used ta sit every day? Ya wanna go abouts five miles after that, but tha squiraal got run over by one of thems Mass of 2 Shits tourist drivers so ya won’t see him, just tha stump…”

It’s said ya not you

we use folk instead of people.

note that if your MC is from out of state and going to school in Maine, she’ll get labeled the “new folk” and likely well find no one willing to talk with her, sit with her, or include her…. the rift between native Mainers and “new folks” “tourists” and most esp “folks from Mass of 2 Shits” is big… very very big… and feuding can become bad in the more remote Northern regions shoot-outs with hunting rifles and burning down folks houses is alarmingly common in places like Hansville Woods, Milo, Palmira… my uncle who was from Maine, but moved to Utah for 10 years, and than moved back to Maine, is considered a traitor to his home state and has had his house burned to the ground twice in 4 years). Police are no help and very likely to have been involved. It’s not uncommon for the police to respond to such events with comments like “well that’s what happens.”

In big cities of Southern Maine, like Biddeford, Saco, or Portland, you don’t see this kind of thing too much anymore, but in most smaller towns it’s still pretty bad. Keep in mind too that most smaller towns have less than 1,000 people living in them, and there can be over a mile between house… Maine is one of the biggest states, but has one of the lower populations. When we say our neighbor down the road, we could mean 5 or 10 miles away.

There is a lot of still unexplored old growth forest in Maine. Mountain people do exist. Many families go for years without contact with non-family members. Uniques family lingo’s and weird “twinlige” slang results. This is only seen in the very far North, however, and is not as common as it was 20 years ago.

The only “outsiders” that Maine folk like and welcome are the French Canadians. Every year Maine and Quebec get together and vote to leave the unions and join forces. Every year US gov and Canada gov over throws the votes. Native Mainers hate being part of the US and Quebec hates being part of Canada….

reason: Maine was originally part of Quebec. Quebec being it’s own country separate from Canada. In the 1880’s Canada and the US ripped Quebec in half and each took a part of it. The lower part became the state of Maine. That happened barely 100 years ago, so there are still a lot of folks alive who remember that Maine was not always a US state, and they feel that the US is a greedy gov and hate being a part of it. THIS is why whenever folks come to Maine from out of state, they get the cold shoulder. As a general rule if you come to Maine from any place in the US outside of Maine, you are going to be treated like an invader, because that’s the view Mainers have of outsiders.

Maine is like another country, because 100 years ago, it was another country and most Native Mainers feel that they were not given a choice in the matter when they were suddenly forced to become part of the US.

Never try to write a Mainer character unless you can pull off the anti-non-Mainer attitude, cause it won’t be believable

This info comes to you from one who lives on land that was settled by my family in 1657 (who married into the Native tribe, whom lived here thousands of years before that), and we are one of the few families in all of the US that still lives on their original land. My family is very strong in the pro-Maine, anti-outsider movement.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

———-
Publishing Methods
How to Start a Publishing Company
Creating Character Profiles
Secrets To Writing Success
How To Make a Lord Sesshomaru Costume

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

black birdfall leaves centerblack bird

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Categories: Canada · France · Just For Writers · Maine · Maineland · Old Orchard Beach · writing advice

Rainbow Butterfly

Sunday, July 8, 2007 · Leave a Comment

The newest addition to the Copper Cockeral line.  To see all products from this line go to: http://www.printfection.com/coppercockeral/Butterflies/_s_88028

Or to see many of our other 100+ designs head to: http://www.squidoo.com/coppercockeral/

 

Thanks for checking out our sites!

~~Wendy C. Allen

Butterflies

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Baseball Jerse

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Baseball Jerse

9 colors | $21.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Crewneck

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Crewneck

4 colors | $24.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Hooded Sw

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Hooded Sw

4 colors | $29.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Cork Bottom Co

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Cork Bottom Co

$8.49

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Jumbo Tote Bag

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Jumbo Tote Bag

$18.99

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Large Cutting

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Large Cutting

$33.99

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

————-

Copper Cockeral
Publishing Your NaNo Novel?
Do You and I Read the Same Books?
*I Love Phookas!*

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Categories: Art · Copper Cockeral Cards and Gifts · butterfly · rainbow · tote bag · watercolor

Rainbow Butterfly

Sunday, July 8, 2007 · Leave a Comment

The newest addition to the Copper Cockeral line.  To see all products from this line go to: http://www.printfection.com/coppercockeral/Butterflies/_s_88028

Or to see many of our other 100+ designs head to: http://www.squidoo.com/coppercockeral/

 

Thanks for checking out our sites!

~~Wendy C. Allen

Butterflies

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Baseball Jerse

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Baseball Jerse

9 colors | $21.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Crewneck

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Crewneck

4 colors | $24.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Hooded Sw

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Hooded Sw

4 colors | $29.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Cork Bottom Co

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Cork Bottom Co

$8.49

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Jumbo Tote Bag

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Jumbo Tote Bag

$18.99

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Large Cutting

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Large Cutting

$33.99

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

————-

Copper Cockeral
Publishing Your NaNo Novel?
Do You and I Read the Same Books?
*I Love Phookas!*

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Categories: Art · Copper Cockeral Cards and Gifts · butterfly · rainbow · tote bag · watercolor

Rainbow Butterfly

Sunday, July 8, 2007 · Leave a Comment

The newest addition to the Copper Cockeral line.  To see all products from this line go to: http://www.printfection.com/coppercockeral/Butterflies/_s_88028

Or to see many of our other 100+ designs head to: http://www.squidoo.com/coppercockeral/

 

Thanks for checking out our sites!

~~Wendy C. Allen

Butterflies

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Baseball Jerse

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Baseball Jerse

9 colors | $21.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Crewneck

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Crewneck

4 colors | $24.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Hooded Sw

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Kids Hooded Sw

4 colors | $29.99

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Cork Bottom Co

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Cork Bottom Co

$8.49

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Jumbo Tote Bag

Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Jumbo Tote Bag

$18.99

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Large Cutting

 Rainbow Butterfly by Wendy C. Allen Large Cutting

$33.99

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

————-

Copper Cockeral
Publishing Your NaNo Novel?
Do You and I Read the Same Books?
*I Love Phookas!*

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Categories: Art · Copper Cockeral Cards and Gifts · butterfly · rainbow · tote bag · watercolor

MySpace Friends Trains: Harry Potter and Prof Snape

Sunday, July 8, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Okay, so I keep hearing about how great “friend trains” are. Well, I’m testing them out to see if they really are all the hoopla I keep hearing.

Here are the ones I just made so far. Join any, all, or none if you want to.

==================================================== Join this list if you are a Harry Potter fan – Round No.1 *^ 825044912

Create Your 0wn Train Here!


Train: For Fans of Harry Potter! Round No.1
The 0wner & Captain: EelKat
Female, 31 Years 0ld

Add To Friends


====================================================

For all those who love Snape! – Round No.1 —————–

2031685152

Create Your 0wn Train Here!


Train: Snape Lovers A-Nonny-Mouse Round No.1
The 0wner & Captain: EelKat
Female, 31 Years 0ld

Add To Friends

 

==================================================== ==================================================== ==================================================== ==================================================== ====================================================

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Work From Home: Is it possible?

Friday, July 6, 2007 · Leave a Comment

In recent weeks my comment box and messages on MySpace have been bogged down with “get paid to take survies” and other get rich quick scams. I am writing this post in responce to them, knowing that both the senders sending them well get this, and that others who are sick of getting them, well also get this. My hope is that by the end of this post you well all know the differance between a work at home job and a work at home scam.

I pray that you all well be saved a lot of time, money, and heartache as a result of reading my own experiances with working at home.

Work From Home, Is It Possible?

Everyone asks this question,  and for those of you with this goal, you  prob’ly find yourself asking it more than most people.

Yes, it is, and not really that hard to start either, though most find it hard to keep going. First you have to ask yourself, what is it you want to do?

The most successful work at home jobs are the ones you created yourself. Here are few examples of people I know who work at home:

My uncle started working at home in the 1960’s building clay bricks, and building houses for people out of them…today he owns a multi-million-dollar corperation that not only builds houses but also building brick churches, but he still runs the buseness out of his home, and he works longer and harder than the average non-home worker.

My mom worked at home too, she was a professional seamstress, sewing fancy dresses for little girls, christening gowns, and cloth dolls. At one point she bought her own brick and mortar store (the house next door to us) and was selling to summer tourists (in Old Orchard Beach we see an average of 2 million tourists each month), but the shop proved to be a bigger home business than my mother had expected. She had no time to sew the crafts anymore, which was her passion, so after 3 years, she shut it down and sold her items to other shops on consignment instead. Now she is hoping to build a web site and move her opperation online by next year.

My dad, he worked at home too, he was a rought driver for the local newspaper, delivering the Portland Press Herald, the Sunday Telegram, the Boston Globe, and the New York Times to over 1000 customers 7 days a week 365 days a year, with not one single day off for the past 21 years… his annual gas costs are over $5,000 each year, and he goes through 3 to 4 cars a year (rought driving is the number one killer of engines and transmissions) , his annual income was under $12,000 a year.

Another uncle of mine works at home, as a real estate agent. He at one point cliamed to own a multi million dollar alpaca farm in Austrailia. (I can’t verify that as I have never been to Austailia, so never saw the farm  myself). Last I heard he had given up on the real estate business in favor of yet another work at home business he had set out to create. Don’t know the details on that, or if it succeeded or flopped.

And yet another uncle works at home, buying juck from yard sales and reselling it at flea markets. His income is average of less than $10,000 a year, but he does this as a side-line hobby. If he set out to do this full time instead of part-time in his spare time, he could easily triple that figure.

I work at home: I am a writer of both fiction and non-fiction, and I own a small press publishing house which I built myself from the ground up. As most writers/publishers know already, you are lucky if you break even in this business, making it a true job of passion.

So in answer to your question, does work at home exist?

Yes, it does, but it is not a get-rich-quick-scam-artist-work-at-home; that type of work at home well banckrupt you quicker than you can blink. REAL work at home is when you take a skill and use it to help those around you. If you are hired by a business, they pay you for your product/service. If you start your own business, you get paid when your customers pay you. It may look like a private or small business to the world, but it is in fact you working out of your home and thus working at home. However, it is hard work, long hours, no vacation, you get dirty, you get tired, and in the long run, not working at home would have been much less stressful and much easier.

In short working at home is not a get rich quick scheme. Working at home IS NOT getting paid to take survies.
Working at home is not, clicking on ads on Google.

Working at home is you getting a business lisence and setting up shop, either online or brick&mortar, and selling your product or services to your customers. Most people are not cut out for the hard labor and long hours of working at home, but for those of you who are, it’s the best thing you could ever do..
 

Remember:

Employers ask you to fill out a job application, and will ask for past job referances, your SSN, and your criminal records history.

If you did not fill out an application, you did not apply for a real job.

If you filled out an application, but paid for the application form, you got scammed!

and if you can’t find a business to work for: start the business you want to work for an be your own boss in your own home.

We know this, saddly from experiance.

Back in the early 1980’s my mom saw just such an ad in a magazine. BIG promises of lots of money. She sent the money in, for not one ad but 2 differant ones. The first promised big bucks for sewing baby bibs, the second for making beaded earrings. Both ads were pretty much the same: send in a certain amount of money and they’d send you the supplies, you make the items and send them back to them, they sell them. Simple, sounded great, my mom had at one time been a seamstress, she thought she could sew up a storm of baby bibs for a legit company to sell them. That’s what we all thought, we should have read the fine print…or rather, we should have taken a notice that there was no fine print to read! Or maybe that it was a P.O.Box and not an actual address that was listed in the ad, that should have tipped us off.

Well, the supplies came, most of it cheap junk that we could have gotten cheaper and better quality at a dollar store, my mom haveing been a profesional seamstress thought that useing this absolute crap to make these items seemed pretty stupid and unprofessional but, that’s the items the company used so that’s what they sent…alarm bells should have gone off than…we should have realized that no REAL manufacturer, is gonna use such poor quality supplies to make their goods.

Well, we (my mom, my dad, and me) set out to sewing baby bibs and beaded earings. Comes time to send the items back and low and behold, the P.O.Box had been cancled, the “company” turned out to never have existed, and we were stuck with a bunch of stuff we couln’t use or sell.

We learned a lesson. It wasn’t a very big investment, less than $100, but it was not money well spent…or maybe it was, because it taught us to look at these scams with open eyes and questioning minds.

We learned a lot of things:

We learned to read ads more closely.
We learned to question “companies” with ONLY a P.O.Box.
We learned to ask the company for a job application form.
We learned to ask for a history of the company.
We learned to do a background check on the company.
We learned to never pay money to get a job.
We learned to REAL manufatures don’t put ads in magazine classified.
We learned to that most manufactures only hire local residants, so that the employee has to bring the items right in to the factory to be inspected, before the company well accept and pay you.
We learned that REAL jobs assembling items for manufactures, are rare and few and far between, and that you could be on a waiting list for years before they need enough help to get all the way down to your name on their list.

Now we have the internet, and it seems that with it came millions more ways to scam people out of their hard earned money. Every day thousands of new Work-At-Home, Get-Big-Bucks websites are added to the net. A Google search will bring up millions upon millions of them.

When I look at these sites, with their promises of BIG MONEY. I laugh. You see I own more than 200 web sites, 12 fanlistings, and 13 private message boards. I know how to build a website, quite well, maybe not to proffessional standards, but pretty darned close, and than I see these scam sites: many of them are made useing Geo-Cities, Yahoo, AOL, Earthlink, and countless other “free home pages”. Right off the bat that fact alone should set off a RED WARNING ALARM in any person, but it seems that many people do not even notice this fact, and send their money in.

A real company that intends to pay you to work for them, would not be useing a “free home page”. A small craft shop run by the sweet little old lady next door, might use a free home page to sell her knitting and cloth dolls, but she wouldn’t be asking you to send money to make money…no she’d show you a picture of her dolls with a price for each one. The Goth girl down the road might use a free site to peddel her homemade velvet capes, while the Wiccan next door lists home made soap on her MySpace. These are people like me and you who are working at home and selling what they make. These people are legit, and you’ll notice they never ask you to pay for a membership before they allow you to buy their products. These people are small business owners working from home.

The free sites that ask you to spend money to make money… those are the ones you got to watch out for. Those are the scams.

If you see a site made by a free home page site, and offering you lots of money for doing next to nothing, run for the hills, because there is no company that is going to use a free web host to seek out workers. Not a single one.

My hope in writing all of this is that it well help you to weed out the scams from the real work at home jobs.

To all: Good luck on your goal.

~~EK

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