Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Tuesday Tidbit: DRYING MY HAIR WITH VACUUM EXHAUST

I have a special guest on my blog today. My friend Suzanne Norquist had an interesting post on her blog last year that I found fun and fascinating. I asked her if I could share it on my blog. She graciously agreed. Enjoy!
***
As I researched inventions of the 1920’s, I learned that before hair dryers were invented, women used the exhaust end of the vacuum cleaner to dry their hair. Hair dryers gave them another option.
Check out this radio ad for a hair dryer in the 1920’s.


Here are a couple of the out-takes:
“Ladies, tired of drying your hair with the same old vacuum cleaner?”
            This proves the point. Women used vacuum cleaners as hairdryers.
“With a speedy motor that will dry your hair in as little as 25 minutes”
            My hair air dries in less than 25 minutes.
“Thanks to an extra-long extension cord, you can move around while primping your locks."
I can’t even imagine doing household chores while I dry my hair. They suggest cooking and caring for children.
For the sake of this blog, I considered drying my hair with the vacuum cleaner. It wouldn’t work well with the upright vacuum. Maybe the shop vac. The last thing I used it for was cleaning the mold out of the outdoor fountain.


Never mind! I’m not that devoted to providing interesting content.
Instead, I found a YouTube video. The girl in this one appears to be a model reenacting the time her hair dryer broke and her mother told her to use a vacuum cleaner.



I don’t think she vacuumed mold out of a fountain first. Her vacuum looks brand new.
I also saw videos of people drying their hair by pulling it into the vacuum hose. Again, gross. There is a vacuum product designed specifically for hair called RevAir that claims to straighten hair while it dries.
I looked a little further into the history of hair dryers. It isn’t surprising that they were invented in the 1920s. Electricity and small appliances were widely available.
There were a few hair dryers before electricity. In 1890, French stylist Alexander Godefroy invented a large, seated dryer which was a bonnet that attached to the chimney pipe of a gas stove. It included an escape valve for steam so women’s heads wouldn’t cook, which is terrifying.


There is a whole history of hair dryers that make people look like space aliens and helmet heads.


People are creative. Just like they used vacuum cleaners to dry hair, they also use hand held hair dryers to do other things.
Suggestions from some websites include,
Cleaning candle wax
Blowing up air mattresses
Removing Band-Aids from your skin
Blasting wrinkles out of clothing
Removing vinyl lettering on shirts bought at thrift stores.
(Actually, this is a great idea)
Making smores
Here is a link to a smore making video.



Again, gross. Although, I suppose the hair dryer is cleaner than the shop vac.
It just goes to show how creative people can be. If there’s a way to misuse a product, we can find it. Then inventors grab a hold of the idea and refine it, and voila, a new product is born. What started as a vacuum cleaner becomes a smore maker. Imagine the infomercials.

***
Thanks, Suzanne. I love learning stuff like this.

Suzanne's novellas are . . .
“A Song for Rose” in A Bouquet of Brides Collection
For Seven Bachelors, This Bouquet of Brides Means a Happily Ever After.
Rockledge, Colorado, 1882
Can Patrick O’Donnell, a tenor disillusioned by the performance industry, convince Rose Miller that that there is more to music than her dream of joining an opera company?

“Mending Sarah’s Heart” in the Thimbles and Threads Collection
Four historical romances celebrating the arts of sewing and quilting.
Rockledge, Colorado, 1884
Sarah seeks a quiet life as a seamstress. She doesn’t need anyone, especially her dead husband’s partner. If only the Emporium of Fashion would stop stealing her customers and the local hoodlums would leave her sons alone. When she rejects her husband’s share of the mine, his partner Jack seeks to serve her through other means. But will his efforts only push her further away?

Suzanne Norquist is the author of two novellas, “A Song for Rose” in A Bouquet of Brides Collection and “Mending Sarah’s Heart” in the Thimbles and Threads Collection. Everything fascinates her. She has worked as a chemist, professor, financial analyst, and even earned a doctorate in economics. Research feeds her curiosity and she shares the adventure with her readers. She lives in New Mexico with her mining engineer husband and has two grown children. When not writing, she explores the mountains, hikes, and attends kickboxing class.
She authors a blog entitled, Ponderings of a BBQ Ph.D.




Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Tuesday Tidbits: OFF TO SEE THE WIZARD

MGM [Public domain]

As for you, the anointing you received from him remains in you, and you do not need anyone to teach you. But as his anointing teaches you about all things and as that anointing is real, not counterfeit—just as it has taught you, remain in him. 1 John 2:27

Dorothy, Scarecrow, Tinman, and the Cowardly Lion were off to the Great and Powerful Wizard of Oz with the hope he would grant them each what they were searching for. Did you ever notice how they all had what they were looking for all the time? Dorothy had the ruby slippers that would send her home. Scarecrow wanted a brain yet he was the thinker of the quartet and came up with all the plans. Tinman wanted a heart but was the first one to cry. And the Cowardly Lion was ready and willing to face evil to rescue a friend.

CBS Television Network [Public domain]

Do you remember what the Wizard said to each of them? Others had one thing each of them did not. Then he proceeded to give them each a gift that acknowledged what they already had that they were searching for; a diploma for Scarecrow to prove he was smart, a heart for Tinman to prove he was caring, and a metal for Lion to prove he was brave. Then Glenda told Dorothy that she also had what she needed all along. She had the means to fulfill her heart’s desire . . . to go home.


Then Glenda told Dorothy that she also had what she needed all along. She had the means to fulfill her heart’s desire . . . to go home.

dbking [CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)]

How much we are like these well-loved characters. We look outside ourselves for what we already have. We search in other people to find worth. We fill our lives with stuff in search of what we already have. We ask others to interpret Bible verses for us and assume because of their religious degree that they are infallible in their interpretation. Our God is a living God and His Word is a living Word. If you only listen to how someone else interprets the Bible, you may miss what God is trying to say to you personally.

Fellowship is good, consulting a counsel of others is good, learning how others interpret a verse is good, but when we accepted Jesus Christ as Our Lord and Savior, He gave each of us the promised Counselor to guide and direct us through each step of our lives. Don’t get so caught up in other people’s words that you miss what God is trying to say specifically to you.

In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express. Romans 8:26

Heavenly Lord Jesus, Help me to remember to turn to You in times of trouble or confusion. Help me learn how to pray to gain Your understanding and perspective on my problems. Amen.

Join me for Mid-Month Madness on February 15th from 11am-1:30pm PST (12pm-2:30pm MST, 1pm-3:30pm CST, 2pm-4:30pm EST).


5 bestselling, award-winning authors will be gathered for this event. One part FaceBook party and one part blog. Both places offer opportunities to win books and more.



Here's were to find the event:
FB: https://www.facebook.com/events/222211505482950/?active_tab=discussion
HHH Blog: https://www.hhhistory.com/ -- The blog portion won't be live until the 15th.

THIMBLES AND THREADS: 4 Love Stories Are Quilted Into Broken Lives

Love Stitched into Four Women’s Lives
Enjoy four historical romances that celebrate the arts of sewing and quilting. When four women put needle and thread to fabric, will their talents lead to love? #thimblesandthreadscollection
Click HERE to order yours today.
FREE Preview
#thimblesandthreadscollection
“Bygones” by Mary Davis
Texas, 1884
Drawn to the new orphan boy in town, Tilly Rockford soon became the unfortunate victim of a lot of Orion Dunbar’s mischievous deeds in school. Can Tilly figure out how to truly forgive the one who made her childhood unbearable? Now she doesn’t even know she holds his heart. Can this deviant orphan-train boy turned man make up for the misdeeds of his youth and win Tilly’s heart before another man steals her away?

Other stories in this collection:
“The Bridal Shop” by Grace Hitchcock, “Mending Sarah’s Heart” by Suzanne Norquist, and “Binding Up Wounds” by Liz Tolsma


THE DAUGHTER'S PREDICAMENT (Book 2 in the Quilting Circle series)
FREE Preview
Can a patient love win her heart?

As Isabelle Atwood’s romance prospects are turning in her favor, a family scandal derails her dreams. While making a quilt for her own hope chest, Isabelle’s half-sister becomes pregnant out of wedlock and Isabelle--always the unfavored daughter--becomes the family sacrifice to save face. Despite gaining the attention of a handsome rancher, her parents are pressuring her to marry a man of their choosing to rescue her sister’s reputation. A third suitor waits silently in the wings, hoping for his own chance at love. Isabelle ends up with three marriage proposals, but this only further confuses her decision.

A handsome rancher, a stranger, and an unseen suitor are all waiting for an answer.  Isabelle loves her sister, but will she really allow herself to be manipulated into a marriage without love? Will Isabelle capitulate and marry the man her parents wish her to, or will she rebel and marry the man they don’t approve of? Or will the man leaving her secret love poems sweep her off her feet?

HEARTBEATS IN TIME – 5 books of Old West Christian Romance (4 novels and
novellas) by 7 bestselling, award-winning authors, including my book, The Widow’s Plight. You'll love these 8 unique stories of love! Get it here: https://amzn.to/2VzRBoI
#HeartbeatsInTimeSet
FREE Preview
The Widow’s Plight (Book 1 in the Quilting Circle series) by Mary Davis
A single mother steps out of the shadows of abuse and into the sunshine. But will a secret clouding her past cost her the man she loves?
Finding Love In Last Chance, California by Miralee Ferrell
Dreams of My Heart by Barbara Scott
Hills of Nevermore by Janalyn Voigt
Heart of a Cowboy Novella Collection--four Old West romances by Susan Page Davis, Miralee Ferrell, Yvonne Lehman, and Vickie McDonough

#ChristianRomance #HistoricalRomance #Romance

MARY DAVIS s a bestselling, award-winning novelist of over two dozen titles in both historical and contemporary themes. Her 2018 titles include; "Holly and Ivy" in A Bouquet of Brides CollectionCourting Her Amish HeartThe Widow’s PlightCourting Her Secret Heart , “Zola’s Cross-Country Adventure” in The MISSAdventure Brides Collection , and Courting Her Prodigal Heart . 2019 titles include The Daughter's Predicament and "Bygones" in Thimbles and Threads. She is a member of ACFW and active in critique groups.




Coming June 2020! The Damsel's Intent book 3 in the Quilting Circle series. 
A hermit comes down from the mountains to snag a husband.
Mary lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband of over thirty-four years and two cats. She has three adult children and two incredibly adorable grandchildren. Find her online at:

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Tuesday Tidbits: Mmm . . . SOMETHING SMELLS HAPPY


Photo by Artem Beliaikin from Pexels 

Have you ever noticed that when most people smell flowers, they have a contented look on their face or smile? Or walked into a bakery, drink in the smell of fresh bread, and immediately felt better? Or smelled candle after candle? I confess, I could probably smell candles all day. It’s like ambrosia for my nose.

Smells have an effect on our mood, emotions, and sense of wellbeing. As well as alert us to danger like smoke, rotting food, or a skunk. They can also conjure up memories associated with certain smells. When I smell raspberries, I’m transported back to my grandparents’ home and the raspberry bushes in the backyard. I can see my tiny, little grandma (Whom I thought was tall when I was a tot.) standing on the back porch in her housedress and apron, telling us to get out of raspberries. We were just playing hide-n-seek. Honest.

Photo by Andrew Wilson from Pixabay

Each of these smells is a type of aromatherapy. Good smells trigger positive emotions and actions, while negative ones trigger the opposite. This is why we like to have good smelling things around us like candles, flowers, and incense. A lot of household products have added scents in them from our cleaning products to our bathing products to our packaged foods to make them more appealing. If something doesn’t smell good, we don’t want it. The perfume industry has made a huge business out of favorable scents.

Public Domain
Certain aromas can lift your mood and energize you. The connection between smell and emotion are extremely close. Breathing in pleasant smells triggers positive reactions in the brain, resulting in a sense of wellbeing.

Some benefits of aromatherapy are:
  • Reduce stress by decreasing levels of cortisol, the stress hormone, therefore making one more content
  • Lavender has been shown to reduce crying in infants and promote sleep in infants and adults
  • Beneficial effects on anxiety and depression
  • Relief from mental fatigue
  • Alter brainwaves and behavior
  • Businesses use this last one to get you to buy more. Certain scents make one more likely to buy products. Realtors will have a pot of spices simmering on the stove or bake cookies when they have an open house. These aromas make people feel relaxed, safe, and at home, and therefore more open to purchasing the house.
The following aromas may help with the following moods.
CAUTION: Before using any aromatherapy, make sure you aren’t allergic to a scent, it won’t cause an asthma attack, or cause any other kind of health or medical issue for you.

Off2riorob [CC BY-SA (https///creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)]
1. Relaxing and Calming: Lavender, Roman Chamomile, Sandalwood, Geranium, Rose, Jasmine, Frankincense, Grapefruit
2. Invigorating: Peppermint, Sandalwood, Lemon, Orange
3. Balancing: Cinnamon, Basil, Parsley
4. Uplifting, Inner security, & Self-acceptance: Rose, Bergamot, Geranium, Jasmine, Grapefruit, Lemon, Orange, Sandalwood, Frankincense, Vetiver, Cedarwood.
5. Focus, Alert, & Attentive: Cedarwood, Frankincense, Rosemary
6. Anxiety: Vanilla, Lavender 
7. Control Cravings: Green Apples, Bananas , Vanilla
8. Reduce Pain: Lavender, Peppermint 
9. Depression: May Chang, Frankincense, Lemon, Grapefruit, Jasmine, Clary Sage, Sandalwood, Ylang Ylang, Geranium, Orange, Neroli (orange blossom), and Helichrysum.
10. Confidence: Bay laurel, Bergamot, Cypress, Grapefruit, Jasmine, Rosemary, Orange.

Some aromas have multiple benefits. I have used lavender for relaxing, anxiety relief, and drifting off to sleep. Vanilla is also a very happy aroma for me, while my one son was repelled by it. Each person needs to find the ones that work for them.

Do you aromatherapy? What are your favorites?

THIMBLES AND THREADS: 4 Love Stories Are Quilted Into Broken Lives

Love Stitched into Four Women’s Lives
Enjoy four historical romances that celebrate the arts of sewing and quilting. When four women put needle and thread to fabric, will their talents lead to love? #thimblesandthreadscollection
Click HERE to order yours today.
FREE Preview
#thimblesandthreadscollection
“Bygones” by Mary Davis
Texas, 1884
Drawn to the new orphan boy in town, Tilly Rockford soon became the unfortunate victim of a lot of Orion Dunbar’s mischievous deeds in school. Can Tilly figure out how to truly forgive the one who made her childhood unbearable? Now she doesn’t even know she holds his heart. Can this deviant orphan-train boy turned man make up for the misdeeds of his youth and win Tilly’s heart before another man steals her away?

Other stories in this collection:
“The Bridal Shop” by Grace Hitchcock, “Mending Sarah’s Heart” by Suzanne Norquist, and “Binding Up Wounds” by Liz Tolsma


THE DAUGHTER'S PREDICAMENT (Book 2 in the Quilting Circle series)
FREE Preview
Can a patient love win her heart?


As Isabelle Atwood’s romance prospects are turning in her favor, a family scandal derails her dreams. While making a quilt for her own hope chest, Isabelle’s half-sister becomes pregnant out of wedlock and Isabelle--always the unfavored daughter--becomes the family sacrifice to save face. Despite gaining the attention of a handsome rancher, her parents are pressuring her to marry a man of their choosing to rescue her sister’s reputation. A third suitor waits silently in the wings, hoping for his own chance at love. Isabelle ends up with three marriage proposals, but this only further confuses her decision.


A handsome rancher, a stranger, and an unseen suitor are all waiting for an answer.  Isabelle loves her sister, but will she really allow herself to be manipulated into a marriage without love? Will Isabelle capitulate and marry the man her parents wish her to, or will she rebel and marry the man they don’t approve of? Or will the man leaving her secret love poems sweep her off her feet?

HEARTBEATS IN TIME – 5 books of Old West Christian Romance (4 novels and
novellas) by 7 bestselling, award-winning authors, including my book, The Widow’s Plight. You'll love these 8 unique stories of love! Get it here: https://amzn.to/2VzRBoI
#HeartbeatsInTimeSet
FREE Preview
The Widow’s Plight (Book 1 in the Quilting Circle series) by Mary Davis
A single mother steps out of the shadows of abuse and into the sunshine. But will a secret clouding her past cost her the man she loves?
Finding Love In Last Chance, California by Miralee Ferrell
Dreams of My Heart by Barbara Scott
Hills of Nevermore by Janalyn Voigt
Heart of a Cowboy Novella Collection--four Old West romances by Susan Page Davis, Miralee Ferrell, Yvonne Lehman, and Vickie McDonough

#ChristianRomance #HistoricalRomance #Romance

MARY DAVIS s a bestselling, award-winning novelist of over two dozen titles in both historical and contemporary themes. Her 2018 titles include; "Holly and Ivy" in A Bouquet of Brides CollectionCourting Her Amish HeartThe Widow’s PlightCourting Her Secret Heart , “Zola’s Cross-Country Adventure” in The MISSAdventure Brides Collection , and Courting Her Prodigal Heart . 2019 titles include The Daughter's Predicament and "Bygones" in Thimbles and Threads. She is a member of ACFW and active in critique groups.





Coming June 2020! The Damsel's Intent book 3 in the Quilting Circle series. 
A hermit comes down from the mountains to snag a husband.
Mary lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband of over thirty-four years and two cats. She has three adult children and two incredibly adorable grandchildren. Find her online at:

Tuesday Tidbits: LIFE UPDATE

 I’ve been fencing! Public Domain, Wiki Commons  Not that kind. This kind.     Let me back up to explain my absence. The past few mont...