Dr. Seuss True-isms

DrSeuseQuotes

I found this on Pinterest and couldn’t resist adding it to my blog.

These are but 5 Dr. Seuss True-isms . . . I’m sure there are dozens more that you enjoy and may apply to your life. Some of the stories were probably your favorites . . . all because they seemed to speak to you . . . giving you some insight to something you had been thinking about . . . or it just made you feel good . . . or made you laugh.

Even as adults we have learned many things from our childhood that has stuck with us. 

These are our personal true-isms.

Thoughts and ideas we pass down to our children . . . and grandchildren . . .

We continue to learn . . . years after we’ve finished school . . .

We learn from books and movies . . . there is something that resonates within us . . . It could be a greeting card we received . . . Or even something we observed while taking a walk or bike ride . . .

There is inspiration all around us . . . we just have to stop long enough to see . . . to hear . . . to think . . . 

In my senior year of high school we had a “ditch day” . . . with planned activities . . .

Yes, there were the rehearsals for the graduation ceremony and then we went to the park for lunch . . . then we were free to go home for a nap because we had a Disney Grad Night celebration . . .

I remember that picnic lunch in the park . . . years later, I’d drive by and remember . . .

Then, decades earlier I stopped and walked through that area of the park. I even sat down . . . lost in memory of that day . . . a day when the 12 years of education came to an end . . . a time to plan for a future . . . yes, college . . . some friends were getting married . . . others had jobs . . .

I sat there . . . alone . . . remembering . . . thinking of all those kids . . . their dreams and goals . . .

Yes, I achieved my goals . . . as far as it went . . . with life lessons thrown in . . .

I do feel very fortunate and have been blessed by many who have come into my life . . . 

No, I haven’t returned to the park . . . I remember it . . . but I have my own place to go for reflection . . . to see . . . to hear . . . to dream . . . and to remember . . .

My grandmother would stop every afternoon and have a cup of tea with a couple of cookies or a Danish . . . and she would sit quietly in her kitchen and sometimes sit on her front porch. It was her quiet time . . . Wherever her thoughts led her, I don’t know . . . she never shared them with me . . . but I imagine they may have gone to similar places where my thoughts take me . . . maybe she sat with her mother or grandmother in the kitchen having a cup of tea and a couple of cookies . . . sitting still and quiet . . . maybe she thought of those days . . . or of stories she read or was told so long ago . . .

Our thoughts can take us on wonderful journeys . . . to the past and even the future . . . we can imagine so very much . . . if we just stop long enough . . .

We are living in a miraculous age . . . the internet opens a whole new concept of communicating with people around the world . . . even communication with our friends and family has improved . . .

I have a couple of friends I met in my internet marketing group who do Google Hangouts regularly . . . It’s real time face time . . . They are thousands of miles away from me, physically, but it’s like we’re right there visiting . . . we’re all sitting in front of our computers in the privacy of our own homes . . . but we’re together . . . but separate . . . That’s a mind-binder . . .

People can take classes on-line . . . they can do crafts together . . . they can visit with several friends or family members via the internet and a URL address . . . My grandmother couldn’t imagine such a thing . . . nor could I a few decades ago . . . It is really something . . .

I hope these Dr. Seuss true-isms gave you some food for thought.

Until next time,

Sharon

Listening To Things Going Bump In The Night

A Windy Night With Gusts Of Wind Banging, Clanging And Going Bump In The NightWindy-Fall-Day1

Windy days have never been my favorite.

It has been blowing steadily for a couple of days and nights. I hear the train whistle off in the distance. Always a calming sound to me.

Our senses pick up more than we’re completely aware of on a daily basis. We may depend upon one more than the others.

You’ve heard how people with vision problems have a keen sense of hearing. Or those with hearing problems develop better visual acuity.

So do we depend primarily upon sight and hearing? What about the other senses of smell, taste and feel?

Which Of The 5 Senses Do We Need More Than The Others?

Sight and sound seem to be the main ones we’re aware of on a daily basis.

But a great chef depends upon taste and smell and then making their masterpiece pleasing to the eye.

Someone working with clay, wood or other medium may depend upon the feel of it as well as the look of it.

I was thinking our sense of touch is the least used, but as a child we were told repeatedly, “Don’t Touch!!” And many stores have a sign stated the same. So we see something we like and we have to touch it, hold it, and turn it about to examine it thoroughly. We can freely look and hear . . . hummm, what about tasting it?

Do We Taste A Brisk Autumn Day?

We definitely feel it.

We smell it and see the many changes and hear the rustling of the leaves as they dance down the street in the wind. Are we aware of tasting it? Tasting what is in the breeze?

Is would appear that we do . . . and does each season have a taste?

I mean the season itself. Not the food we associate with it . . . but just thinking of it brings to mind tastes. I can taste pumpkin pie without having a piece in front of me. Can you?

The memory works on our senses . . . We associate different people by certain fragrances . . . a fresh mowed lawn, the brink of a rain storm . . . a trip to the mountains, the desert or the beach . . . each plays on our senses in different ways.

Yes, So Many Questions

With answers only you can provide.

It’s all subjective.

We may share some similar feelings, sights, sounds, smells and tastes . . . but they are unique to our likes and experiences. And the triggered memories may be unique as well.

I love the smell of a wood burning fireplace. Another may dislike it. The same as oil burning stoves.

The wind brings many aromas with it . . . some good and some, not too appealing.

And the sound of the wind . . . could be interesting to some and frightening to others. The same with rain, thunder and lightning.

Certain music is appealing to many as well as appalling to many others. The same is true regarding different food. Our senses do play a role in many of our decisions of what to listen to, what to watch, what to eat and even where to live.

It does make me wonder if we’re using primarily only our five senses . . . or is a sixth sense at play as well . . . ever so slightly . . .

Thanks for stopping by! Hopefully, I’ve given you some food for thought.

Sharon