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Linking up with Wordless Wednesday and Sandee at Comedy Plus.
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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 prompts are being provided by River at Drifting Through Life.
This week's words/prompts are:
shindig
hootenanny
shemozzle
heiress
banana
barricade
and/or
light
tough
coffee
nightmare
curved
Christmas
"Which service are you attending today?" he asked as he hoisted another COFFEE urn onto the table.
"The one Boots always called the 'HOOTENANNY' service," she answered, grinning.
"Ah, yes, he was always a traditionalist. He used to say, 'The whole SHEMOZZLE is more like a SHINDIG than a church service!" He shook his head. "How I miss him."
"Me, too. He may have been traditional about church services, but he was a TOUGH cookie when it came to keeping up with the latest in business. And he could come up with ideas for church fundraising! Remember the BARRICADE of the parking lot with him charging cars to park here for the CHRISTMAS parade?"
"That was a NIGHTMARE. I thought Ms. Morris was going to barbecue him!"
"She would have, too, on a CURVED spit and over an open flame if the pastor hadn't gotten there in time to smooth it all over."
"Yeah, well those two argued over everything, including which was the right end to start to open a BANANA. Did you know they even got in a small feud over which brand of LIGHT bulbs to buy?"
"A small feud? I thought everything was a big feud to them."
"Yeah, I guess it was, the businessman and the HEIRESS always taking opposite sides. Then at the end, when he went into the hospital, she went and visited him and said, 'Boots, the church is getting too tame without you, I need someone to argue with!'"
"I hadn't heard about that, but I did hear from the pastor that once she realized he was actually dying, Ms. Morris would go up there every day and hold his hand and say, 'Boots, you are a good man, and you love Jesus, and you know where you're going, so don't be afraid and I'm going to just sit and hold your hand until the end.' She did, too."
"And now she's gone as well."
"I know, and there's no one to make fun of the contemporary service any more, even the ones who go to the traditional service don't say too much."
"Oh, I wouldn't be too sure about that. The other day I heard Ms. Tucker saying she can't believe they still play that 'honky-tonk' music at the nine o'clock service."
"That's what she called it? Honky-tonk music?"
"She sure did!"
"Hmmm, I wonder if she has any particular opinions about what kind of light bulbs we should use?"
"You're not thinking of starting something, are you, now?"
"Well, I don't know about starting something, but it can't hurt to have a little discussion..."
"Girl, get yourself in to that church service and don't you come out until you repent, you hear me?"
"Yes, sir!"
(This is loosely based on a member of our church who was affectionately known as Boots, and who did really call the contemporary church service a hootenanny.)
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Today is:
Clean Air Day -- Canada
Coronation Day -- United Kingdom
Coronation Day and Social Forestry Day -- Bhutan (anniversary of the coronation day of the Jigme Singye Wangchuck, the 4th Druk Gyalpo, in 1974, and the day children plant trees)
Festa della Republica -- Italy (National Day/Feast of the Republic)
Festival of Light and Dark Spots -- Fairy Calendar
Festival of Utter Confusion -- an internet declared holiday, and this is the one for me!
Global Running Day globalrunningday.org
Hristo Botev Day -- Bulgaria (poet and national hero who fell fighting the Turks this day in 1876)
"I Love My Dentist" Day -- no one will claim starting this one, so it makes me suspicious
Isabel Province Day -- Isabel Province, Solomon Islands
National Bubba Day -- created by comedian T. Bubba Bechtol for Bubbas everywhere to have their day
National Leave the Office Earlier Day -- sponsored by Laura Stack, The Productivity Pro, who urges people to maximize productivity so they can leave the office earlier every day
National Rocky Road Day
St. Blandina's Day (Patron of girls, people falsely accused, torture victims; Lyon, France)
St. Elmo's Day (a/k/a St. Erasmus; Patron of ammunition workers, boatmen, childbirth and women in labor, explosives workers, mariners, navigators, ordnance workers, sailors, watermen; Gaeta, Italy; against abdominal pains, appendicitis, birth pains, childhood intestinal disease, colic, danger at sea, intestinal disorders, seasickness, stomach diseases, storms)
Tailor's Day -- the first Wednesday of June is noted on many sites as the day to thank your tailor
Yell "Fudge" at the Cobras in North America Day -- at noon, your local time, because according to Wellcat Holidays, cobras hate fudge and will not stay if we mention it
Anniversaries Today:
U.S. President Grover Cleveland marries Frances Folsom, 1886 (only president to wed in the executive mansion)
Elizabeth II is crowned Queen of the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Her Other Realms and Territories & Head of the Commonwealth, 1953 (the first major international event to be televised)
Birthdays Today:
Justin Long, 1978
Zachary Quinto, 1977
Queen 'Masenate Mohato Seeiso, Queen consort of Lesotho, 1976
Wayne Brady, 1972
Wentworth Miller, 1972
Joel Tobeck, 1971
Dana Carvey, 1955
Gary Grimes, 1955
Dennis Haysbert, 1954
Diana Canova, 1953
Cornel West, 1953
Jerry Mathers, 1948
Marvin Hamlisch, 1944
Charles Haid, 1943
Stacy Keach, Jr., 1941
Charlie Watts, 1941
Sally Kellerman, 1937
Milo O’Shea, 1926
Johnny Weissmuller, 1904
Hedda Hopper, 1890
Sir Edward Elgar, 1857
Thomas Hardy, 1840
Marquis de Sade, 1740
Martha Dandridge Custiss Washington, 1731
Today in History:
The Vandals enter Rome and begin 2 weeks of plundering, 455
The First Siege of Antioch ends when Crusader forces take the city, 1098
The first Récollet missionaries arrive at Quebec City, from Rouen, France, 1615
Bridget Bishop is the first person to go to trial in the Salem witch trials in Salem, Massachusetts, 1692
The Derby horserace is held for the first time in Epsom, England, 1780
P. T. Barnum and his circus start their first tour of the United States, 1835
The Slavic congress in Prague begins, 1848
Guglielmo Marconi applies for a patent for his early radio device, 1896
U.S. President Calvin Coolidge signs the Indian Citizenship Act, making Native American Indians withing US territories and states US citizens, 1924
Lou Gehrig begins his streak of 2,130 consecutive games played, 1925
In a referendum, Italians vote to turn Italy from a monarchy into a Republic, and exile their king, Umberto II di Savoia, 1946
The USSR and Yugoslavia sign the Belgrade declaration and thus normalize relations, 1955
Surveyor 1 lands in Oceanus Procellarum on the Moon, becoming the first U.S. spacecraft to soft land on another world, 1966
Pope John Paul II visits his native Poland, becoming the first Pope to visit a Communist country, 1979
The Bhutan Broadcasting Service brings television transmissions to the Kingdom for the first time, 1999
Europe launches its first probe to voyage to another planet, Mars, 2003
The World Health Organization announces the E. coli strain responsible for the 2011 E.coli O104:H4 outbreak had never before been isolated from patients, 2011
The US Congress passes new legislation to reform National Security Agency procedures, restricting gathering of phone records, 2015
One hundred volunters in Bhutan set a world record for tree planting, setting out 49,672 in 1 hour, 2015
This is a lovely, and very moving take on River's prompts. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThis made me think and chuckle.
ReplyDeleteI would sure like to have had Boots join us for mass last Sunday and hear him scold the guilty members for the hootenanny mass; because it was, unfortunately, and I'm with Boots on this.
I like the story using the prompts. We do members making comments of the different types of services. Have a beautiful day.
ReplyDeleteI see Paddington Bear waiting.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
How exciting to be getting ready for a new family addition. The baby sure will be well loved.
ReplyDeleteMy dad was from old school Catholicism and when Father Kronk brought in a guitarist one Sunday my dad called it "hippie music!" He refused to go when there would be musical guests. :) - Your story was wonderful. Sad but wonderful.- Welcoming babies is always so exciting! I love Paddington bear on the mantle.
ReplyDeleteAww! cute and a lovely home waiting :-)
ReplyDeleteHave a tanfastical week 👍
National Rocky Road Day looks to be worth celebrating, with the correct flavor of ice cream.
ReplyDeleteHave a blessed week.
I'm laughing because I was reading that story thinking that it sounded real, then at the end you say that it is, in fact, loosely based in truth.
ReplyDeletePreparing for a grand is such fun. I so remember.
ReplyDeleteI love your use of the prompts and what a lovely memory.
Thank you for joining the Wordless Wednesday Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Wordless Wednesday. Big hug. ♥
Wonderful photos of 'preparing for grandchild' ~ lovely post too ~ Xo
ReplyDeleteLiving moment by moment,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
Great use of all those words Mimi! and what a lucky baby with all these stuffed toys and comfy crib! Cheers!
ReplyDeleteall the best to RW and family; the Paddigton is adorable :)☺☺
ReplyDeletehave heard contemporary cervices called many things; hootenanny is a first !!! ☺☺☺
and 984 PAWS UP to the volunteers in Bhutan; how cool is that :)
The wee one will be a wee bit spoiled! That was a good story.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pictures and wonderful story! Must say, it is an excellent initiative!
ReplyDeleteGood to have stumbled across your blog!
Looks like everything is ready for the baby! I loved that story.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Miss RW! That was a sweet story.
ReplyDeleteThat is a lovely story.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like everything is ready for the grandbaby.
I like the soft toys all lined up ready for cuddling by the new grandbaby.
ReplyDeleteYour delightful story has put a huge smile on my face, I really love the idea of the gentle bickering between friendly factions. The Honky Tonk piano for services would have even me going to listen, and I haven't set foot in a church since my own wedding.
Lovely pictures and great use of the words! Coronation Day! We got our first ever television specially to watch it. I was a baby of course (I wish!)
ReplyDelete