Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Clever Product Name (Wordless Wednesday) and Words for Wednesday

***********************************





Linking up with Wordless Wednesday, Keith, Catsynth, and Sandee at Comedy Plus.     





***********************************






Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and has become a moveable feast of word or picture or music prompts to encourage us to write stories, poems, or whatever strikes our fancy.    


This month the words/prompts are supplied by lissa on her blog.


This week's prompts are: 


1. kerplunk

2. erase

3. meek

4. plead

5. tenacious


Charlotte's colour of the month is Electric Rose.



"I'm not stubborn, I'm TENACIOUS," I heard her say as I walked into the room.


"What's the difference?" he asked and she shot back, "Tenacity is a strong will and stubbornness is a strong won't."


"Well," he was nothing if not quick, "you won't go out with me, so that makes it stubbornness!"


I laughed, being used to my two co-workers.  He would PLEAD with her for a date and with a KERPLUNK she would shoot him down every time.


They'd grown up next door to each other and been friends since forever, or at least since they'd played tea party together when they were kids.  He was always willing to play back then,  he said, as she was always making cakes and cookies in her toy oven that used the light bulb for a heat source.  Now they were grown, he claimed her cooking had gotten better but her tea was still the same, rather watery.


There was nothing MEEK and mild about her and she resisted him with amused patience, not willing to give up their friendship but claiming she didn't want to take it any further than that.  "He knows too many of my secrets and I can't ERASE that," she'd say when I asked why not go out with him, they obviously had a rapport.


Once in so often he'd start in again, asking her out, and as she looked especially nice today in her Electric Rose blouse, it didn't surprise me to find them having this conversation.


Honestly, I always believed the only reason she wouldn't was because so many people expected it, as when you meet them you'd think they were already a couple.  But I'm just a co-worker and it's not my business as long as they are doing their share of the work, and they are.


Unless...


A thought came to me and it's either brilliant or stupid, and only time will tell.  There's a conference coming up that is on a cruise ship, of all places.  The participants come listen to presentations, including ours, but when they aren't at the presentations and we aren't presenting anything, well, it's a cruise, and it can be romantic and fun and she and I are supposed to be the ones going, but if I have an emergency at home and send him...


Maybe this will be continued.




***********************************



Today is:


Ash Wednesday -- Christian (beginning of the Lenten Fast)

     Oskudagur -- Iceland (with the special tradition of hanging oskupokar [ash bags] on people, as girls try to hang bags of ash on men's clothing, and boys try to hang bags of stones on women's clothing; begins Langafasta, and during the fast, you may not even mention meat at all)


Celtic Tree Month Nuin (Ash) begins


Clean Out Your Cubby Holes Day -- internet generated, but if you have any cubby holes, give them a look today, make sure nothing is in there you don't want to see


Cold Day in Hell -- snow fell in the Sahara today in 1979


Day of Spenta Armaiti -- Zoroastrian (goddess of earth and fertility, especially celebrated by women; originally on Esfand 5th, which corresponds to 24 February but is now celebrated on the 18th for reasons i can't figure out)


Festival of Women -- Persian (traditional, it has been kept even among those who are no longer Zoroastrian)


Independence Day -- Gambia(1965)


Losar/Loshar/Sonam Lhosar/Tamang New Year (Lunar New Year) -- Bhutan; Nepal; Tibet (this is Tibetan Year 2152, and it's dominant element is fire, and dominant animal is the horse)


National Battery Day -- probably created by the battery manufacturers, but they won't claim it


National Crab Stuffed Flounder Day


Pluto Day/Solar System Day -- the planet/planetoid was discovered on this day in 1930, and then considered to "complete" the solar system


Ramadan begins -- Islam (at sunset, through the evening of March 19)


Rastraya Prajatantra Dibas -- Nepal (Democracy Day)


Rites of Tacita -- Ancient Roman Calendar (goddess of silence, rites to keep people from speaking out in anger)


St. Bernadette of Lourdes' Day (in France; the remainder of the church celebrates her on 16 April)


St. Fra Angelico's Day (Patron of artists)


Tanigumi Odori -- Tanigumi-mura, Gifu Prefecture, Japan (dance festival)


Thumb Appreciation Day -- your first digit does more than just get mashed when you use a hammer and hit the space bar on your keyboard; take time to appreciate the complexity that is your thumb.



Anniversaries Today:


Tommy Lee marries Pamela Anderson, 1995

Ohio State University is chartered as the first US land-grant college, 1804



Birthdays Today:


Jillian Michaels, 1974

Molly Ringwald, 1968

Dr. Dre, 1965

Matt Dillon, 1964

Vanna White, 1957

John Travolta, 1954

Juice Newton, 1952

John Hughes, 1950

Cybill Shepherd, 1950

Andrea Dromm, 1941

Aldo Ceccato, 1934

Yoko Ono, 1933

Milos Forman, 1932

Toni Morrison, 1931

Gahan Wilson, 1930

George Kennedy, 1925

Helen Gurley Brown, 1922

Bill Cullen, 1920

Jack Palance, 1920

Hans Asperger, 1906

Enzo Ferrari, 1898

George "The Gipper" Gipp, 1895

Wendell Lewis Willkie, 1892

Boris Pasternak, 1890

Nikos Kazantzakis, 1883

Sholem Aleichem, 1859

Louis Comfort Tiffany, 1848

Ernst Mach, 1838

George Peabody, 1795

Count Alessandro Volta, 1745

Uesugi Kenshin, 1530 (Japanese samurai and warlord)

Mary I Tudor, 1516

Saint Jadwiga of Poland, 1374



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"Roots: Next Generations"(TV Miniseries), 1979

"Any Wednesday"(Play), 1964

"The Telephone, or L'Amour à trois"(Comic Opera), 1947

"Trouw"(Publication, Dutch Resistance newspaper), 1943

"Simple Simon"(Musical), 1930

"Cities Service Concerts"(Radio), 1925

"Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"(Publication date), 1885

"The Pilgrim's Progress"(Publication date), 1678



Today in History:


Origin of the Kali Yuga Epoch ("age of vice" or Dark Age) of the Hindu/Buddhist calendars, BC3102

Jerusalem is taken by Emperor Frederik II, 1229

Amda Seyon I, Emperor of Ethiopia, begins his campaigns in the southern Muslim regions, 1332

Henry Tudor (Henry VIII) created Prince of Wales, 1503

Zeeland falls to Dutch rebels, 1574

John Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress" is published, 1678

Fort Saint Lewis, Texas, is founded by Frenchmen under LaSalle at Matagorda Bay, the basis for France's claim to Texas, 1685

Quakers conduct their first formal protest of slavery in Germantown, Pennsylvania, 1688

The premiere of George Frideric Handel's oratorio, "Samson" takes place in London, 1743

Trinidad is surrendered to a British fleet under the command of Sir Ralph Abercrombie, 1797

The Detroit Boat Club (still in existence) forms, 1839

The first continuous filibuster in the US Senate begins, lasts until March 11, 1841

The first regular steamboat service to California begins, 1849

A direct telegraph link between Britain and New Zealand is established, 1876

Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" is published, 1885

The Cave of Winds at Niagara Falls goes almost dry for the first time in 50 years, 1896

Winston Churchill makes his first speech in the British House of Commons, 1901

H. Cecil Booth patents a dust removing suction cleaner, 1901

The first official flight with air mail takes place in Allahabad, British India, when Henri Pequet delivers 6,500 letters to Naini (a distance of about 10K), 1911

The US and Canada begin formal diplomatic relations, with the appointment of Vincent Massey as the first Canadian ambassador to the US, 1927

The first Academy Awards are announced, 1929

While studying photographs taken in January, Clyde Tombaugh discovers Pluto, 1930

The first Church of Scientology is established in Los Angeles, California, 1954

The Space Shuttle Enterprise test vehicle is carried on its maiden "flight" on top of a Boeing 747, 1977

Snow falls in the Sahara Desert in southern Algeria for the only time in recorded history, 1979

Dan Jansen skates world record 1000m (1:12.43), 1994

Pope Benedict XVI announces seven new saints - including American saint Kateri Tekakwitha - and appoints 22 new cardinals, 2012

The Ukrainian Revolution begins, 2014

A twenty-five-year-old cold case murder is solved when police in Minnesota run DNA though a genealogy site and find the suspect, 2019

The swarms of desert locusts affecting east Africa reach South Sudan, threatening a food crisis, 2020

NASA's Perseverance rover successfully lands at Jezero Crater, Mars, on mission to find microfossils, 2021

Singaporean chess prodigy Ashwath Kaushik becomes the youngest player, at eight years old, to defeat a grandmaster in a classic tournament game, 2024

The royal tomb of Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose II (reigning from about 1493 to 1479 BC) is discovered west of the Valley of the Kings, the first tomb of a pharaoh found since Tutankhamun in 1922, 2025

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Tight Pants and Thick Towels, a Random and Happy Tuesday Post

***********************************






It's time once again for a random and happy Tuesday, linking up with Stacy's Random Thoughts at Stacy Uncorked and Sandee at Comedy Plus 


We were back to our usual schedule this week with Carl starting my Monday with a bang.



for some reason, the last two socks never made it to the dryer


Or in this case, a messy laundry room.  Not that the seat cushions in there were his fault.  Probably Ms. V wanted them washed but ran out of time to do it.  I don't like putting them in the wash as they are disintegrating on the bottom and it's a mess, they probably need to be replaced.


Carl himself was heading for the sleep chair and after restoring a bit of order to the laundry room, i went to get the rest of the laundry sorted in his room.







Yes, he used the small hanger that i've been trying to get rid of because it is useless instead of one of the big hangers of which he now has a plethora (because Ms. G gave me some to bring which she didn't need).  There's no telling why, might as well just hang the shirt on a different hanger (if it's clean, which it was) and move on, leaving the question there, hanging from the useless hanger.


I went to turn on the radio and found this.






Next order of business, go get batteries out of the office.




I noted he'd bought this, probably for Sam, the girl he's sweet on.  The fact he still has it means he probably did not get to see her this weekend, but he will get it to her, sooner or later.  Maybe.


Meanwhile, in sorting clothes i found a pair of pants which left me scratching my head.  They were a size 32 waist, and he wears a 36.


Later, when i went to wake him up, he resisted.  "I didn't feel good last night, I'm not ready."


Your alarm went off, i told him, and he sighed deeply.  "All right."  Then, pointing to the pile of pajamas on which he'd been sleeping in his sleep chair, "Are you going to wash these?"


Sorry, i told him, i've started the third load while you were slumbering, i keep telling you if you'd get up a bit earlier the things you are sleeping on would make it into the last load and you wouldn't have to do them yourself.


I'm not taking bets on whether i have to do them next week, either.


Once in his room and talking about what he would wear that day, i also pointed out the too small pants and asked him about where he'd gotten them and who they might belong to.


He looked confused and said, "Well," then paused again.  I noted how small they were and he said, "Well, they do fit..."


I told him they were two waist sizes too small and he said, "Well, they were a bit snug."


I can only imagine.


As i was turning to leave him to his shower, he grabbed the towel i had hanging for him and asked, “Where are the thick ones?”


When i arrive, usually all of his linens are dirty so i grab one of the old, spare towels from the closet in the main house for him to use that day while i wash the rest.


They’re in the wash, i told him.  When you dirty up every single one of them, you get a spare towel and it’s all we have.


He gave me a pained look and shut the bathroom door.


The rest of the morning was the usual and he got off to work, after tramping back in all over the mopped floor looking for his gas pills.  Oh, well, until he moves away, it's still job security.


How about some funnies.








And because it's Carnival time...








Have a blessed and beautiful Tuesday, everyone!








***********************************




It's the Lunar New Year/Chinese New Year/Lhosar/Seol-Nal/Tet!  There are celebrations throughout Asia of the year of the Horse, some before and some after this "official" Western date, some for up to a month as well as Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist celebrations.


It's also Sonam Lhosar in Nepal, the Tamang New Year.


(Thanks to Barb Kowalik and The Cat Blogosphere the event badge.)  



***********************************




Today is Mardi Gras!  Fat Tuesday, Carnival, the last day to feast before the Lenten fast begins tomorrow, greeted with revelry in many parts of the world; related observances and names:

     Scotland, Fasten's E'en or Bannocky Day

     Portuguese, Terça-feira Gorda

     Italian, Martedì Grasso

     Swedish, Fettisdagen

     Norwegian, Fastelavens

     Estonian, Vastlapäev

     Spanish, Martes de Carnaval

     German, Faschingsdienstag

     Hawaiian, Malasada Day

     Lithuanian, Uzgavenes

     Icelandic, Sprengidagur (literally, Bursting Day)

     also Pancake Day or Bursting Day, the day to eat the last of the eggs and butter in the form of some kind of fried cakes, and to eat until bursting


***********************************



Today is:


Day of Cancelled Expectations -- according to William Least Heat-Moon in his autobiography, Blue Highways


Dita e Pavaresise -- Kosovo (Independence Day)(2008)


Feast of Shezmu -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (god of the winepress; date approximate)


February 17 Revolution Day -- Libya


Hachinohe Enburi Matsuri -- Hachinohe, Japan (festival with prayers for a good harvest; through Wednesday)


International Pancake Day


Last day of Celtic Tree Month Luis (Rowan)


Mother's Day -- Israel (Shevat 30)


My Way Day -- today, determine your identity all by yourself, apart from what other people say you should be; sponsored by Wellcat Holidays


National Cafe Au Lait Day


National Indian Pudding Day


National PTA Founders Day -- US


Practice Your Free Throws Day -- spread around the internet by someone who really loves basketball


Quirinalia -- Ancient Roman Calendar (a/k/a Feast of Fools)


Random Acts of Kindness Day -- US (unofficial, but a great idea)  


Shrove Tuesday -- Christian


Snow Ice Cream Day -- internet generated; if you want to try it, and are sure your snow is reasonably clean, add sugar, milk, a touch of vanilla, and enjoy


St. Fortchern of Trim's Day (Patron of bell-founders)


Tanis Diena -- Ancient Latvian Calendar (To honor pigs)



Anniversaries Today:


League of United Latin American Citizens (Lulac) Founded, 1929

Miami University is chartered by the State of Ohio, 1809



Birthdays Today:


Vanessa Atler, 1982

Joseph Gordon-Levitt, 1981

Paris Hilton, 1981

Jerry O'Connell, 1974

Bryan White, 1974

Billie Joe Armstrong, 1972

Denise Richards, 1972

Michael Forbes, 1967

Ronald "Bell Biv" DeVoe, 1967

Michael Jordan, 1963

Lou Diamond Phillips, 1962

Richard Karn, 1959

Rene Russo, 1954

Brenda Fricker, 1945

Jim Brown, 1936

Alan Bates, 1934

Barry Humphries (Dame Edna Everage), 1934

Lee Holby, 1926

Hal Holbrook, 1925

Arthur Kennedy, 1914

Clarence Lindon “Buster” Crabbe, 1908

Red Barber, 1908

Dorothy Canfield Fisher, 1879

William Cadbury, 1867

Samuel Sidney Mcclure, 1857

Friedrich A Krupp, 1854

A. Montgomery Ward, 1844

Rene Theophile Hyacinthe Laennec, 1781

Thomas Malthus, 1766

Arcangelo Corelli, 1653



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"A Prairie Home Companion"(Radio), 1979

"BC"(Comic Strip), 1958

"Madame Butterfly"(Puccini Opera), 1904

"Un Ballo in maschera"(Verdi Opera), 1859

"Siroe, re di Persia"(Handel HWV 24), 1728



Today in History:


Miles Standish is appointed the first commander of the Plymouth colony, 1621

The first volume of Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" is

published, 1776

The first ship passes through the Suez Canal, 1867

Women's suffragist Esther Morris is appointed the first female justice of the peace in the US, in South Pass City, Wyoming, 1870

Sardines are first canned, by Julius Wolff of Eastport, Maine, 1876

Madame Butterfly receives its première at La Scala in Milan, 1904

The first minimum wage law in the US takes effect, in Oregon, 1913

Johnny Weissmuller sets the 100-yard freestyle record (52.4 seconds), 1924

The first telecast of a sporting event in Japan, a baseball game, 1931

The first issue of "Newsweek" magazine is published, 1933

Vanguard 2 – The first weather satellite is launched to measure cloud-cover distribution, 1959

Sales of the Volkswagen Beetle exceed those of the Ford Model-T, 1972

Garry Kasparov beats the Deep Blue supercomputer in a chess match, 1996

Kosovo declares independence, 2008

In racing, Danica Patrick becomes the first woman at the Daytona 500 and the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series to win pole position, 2013

The research journal GSA Today publishes an article in favor of reclassifying mostly underwater microcontinent Zealandia in the South Pacific as the 8th continent, 2017

India's Supreme Court grants equal rights to women in military service, 2020

Around 28,000 women apply for 30 jobs driving trains after they are advertised for women in Saudi Arabia for the first time, 2022

An airplane crashes and flips over at Toronto airport, injuring 21 people in the fourth major aviation accident in North America in a month, 2025