Tuesday, March 9, 2010

The Happy Book




Ok, I'm picturing myself on A HAPPY DAY: Barefoot. Tan. 110 pounds. Laying in green grass under a leafy tree on a hot, sunny afternoon. (No ants crawling out of the grass on me). Pink cotton candy in one hand, an icy can of Pibb Zero in the other. (No bees buzzing around the cotton candy). No phone. A pile of books stacked up beside me and all afternoon to read. A cool blue pool nearby. (No bugs floating in the pool). I can see my little dogs snoozing in a patch of dandelions and Tony casting a line from his canoe. Soon some lovely person will deliver a big plate of fresh pineapple and divinity to me for my supper, then my dapper husband and I will drive to town in our classic convertible for a movie, a round of Goofy Golf (no screaming kids on the course, of course), and a Cherry Limeade from Sonic.  Ah, the perfect day.

My 110-pound days are long gone, I'm afraid, and the closest my husband has ever been to dapper was on our wedding day in his white tux with the bell-bottom pants and blue ruffled shirt (hey, it was the 70s).  But the rest of my perfectly happy day is within reach.  I'm a firm believer in being happy. Maybe that's why I like The Happy Book so much.
   

It celebrates what makes you glad. It teaches you with silly exercises to practice happiness so it gets easier to find.  You can scribble thoughts, make lists, doodle and dream of the big and little things that make you smile. Skip around in it;  there's no special order to it.  As the book says, "Pick it up when you feel crappy. If your day has been just ridiculously, stupidly awful, no need to write in the book -- just read it."  

 

One page instructs you to take $10 and spend it on something totally frivolous that makes you happy.  You know those giant playballs at the grocery store?  That's what I'd buy. I love those things.

Another page says, "Families are an intricate machine made of shared history, love, tradition, weirdness and comfort. Post your favorite family photos here." Weirdness, huh? Seems the perfect
place to post this odd-and-beloved  picture of  Tony.  It always makes me snort:

 

Being happy is good for you. 
The Happy Book is a good reminder of all the big and little things that are good in your life. 
 And we all need reminding.

Tell me in the comments what makes you happy.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Didn't you just do that?



Why, yes, I DID just rearrange.

Thank you for noticing.
 I like to shake it up now and then.

What? No, I can stop re-arranging anytime I want.


Rosie, don't look at me that way. Quit looking at me.

I can't help myself. I'm a compulsive re-arranger.
This week, I moved the counters. All by myself. When I wake up motivated to rearrange the heavy stuff, I can't wait for someone with testosterone to wander by.

So here's the new counter layout, viewed from the front doors:


Hmmm...
does that look messy or interesting? How about interestingly messy?

Check out the pile of Stuff behind the counter: I'm sorry to admit that IS a mess. Boxes to be unpacked, things I abandoned on the floor when I answered the phone and forgot to come back, little wheels off things and a teetering 412-pound stack of brochures. It's an ever-changing assortment that's ever-present, much to my ever-lasting shame. I've come to accept that The Banging of the Shins on Stuff back there is just an occupational hazard:


Oh, well.  Come on in and climb over. 

I've moved forty zillion napkins and paper plates and greeting cards.
The baby gifts have flip-flopped with the kitchen goods, the candles and the lotions have traded places with the invitations, and I can't recall where I put the fuzzy pink Easter ducks but it will come to me in the middle of the night.

So come see. Winter's moved out, Spring's moved in, and I've moved every single thing in the shop.
  I even dusted!


But better make it snappy -- I might move the counters again next week if my feet quit hurting.