Phone Suction for Posts, Reels, and Stories

Phone Suction for Posts, Reels, and Stories

Something New
Let’s make Posts, Reels and Stories

When we moved to Wilmington, my husband was finding such relief from pain with the Green Compass CBD products, I decided to sell them with the hope that I could make enough money to pay for what he was using.  At that time, he was taking the 1000mg tincture every morning, a jelly at night, and the Relief pain cream as needed, which was All The Time!  He has one by the bed, one in the powder room on the counter, and another that was in my purse for as needed.  The Relief pain cream seemed to be the immediate pain relief and the rest was to help improve the overall pain level.

As time passed, I didn’t want to have parties but still wanted to share the products.  I began to try to share online but found people followed but didn’t ask questions.  Then I figured I would create a website to share in a smaller setting.  I love this!  It has led to new connections with people as well as reconnecting with people I had not talked to in a long time.  

 

I started making posts, reels, and stories but was frustrated with the closeness of the phone and the “one-handed” filming.  My baby sister asked if I had one of these. (see picture).  I said no….

Fast forward:  I love this little gadget.  I don’t care if you are recording yourself to send it to a friend or post it for the world, this little thing gives you your own camera person.  I just had to share!

Get one by clicking here

Too fun.  Make filming easier.  Wishing I would have asked earlier.

Basket Weaving

Basket Weaving

Something New
I’m going to make a basket…

Whoever would have thought I would get a pine needle up my fanny that gave me an interest in making a basket.

It all started when I went with my mom to Charleston, SC and saw all these people sitting on the side of the road making sweet grass baskets.  We stopped and looked.  I was shocked at the price of a basket!  Little did I understand what it took to make the basket?  I purchased each of us a very small trivet, as a souvenir from our trip.

Fast forward a couple of years…

I saw a “kit” for sale at a local art museum.  Purchased it.  Set out to make a basket and ended up with something that wasn’t even a coaster.

Now this coaster still sits in the back of the shelf with other items I can’t bring myself to throw away. Next, I signed up for a class on how to make a basket.  This time, I would have more than an 8/5 by 11 directions sheet. 

I was so excited.  The class would meet once every two weeks for a total of 4 classes.  This would give me time to practice.  To my delight, the class was offered at our clubhouse by a resident of our subdivision who had been making pine straw baskets for several years.

At the tables, each seat was set like a “pine straw ” table setting.  We had pine needles, needles, thread, cutters, a bag, and even a thimble.  Boy was I impressed.

I went to my class.  After two hours, I had taken it apart and put it back together three times.  I left with one row around my wooden center.

The two hours flew by and I left with my bag of basket-making supplies, ready to go home and practice.

I had two weeks to work on it.  Did I?  Just like most of my students, two weeks went by and I didn’t touch it until the night before the next class and had forgotten everything I was told at our first class.

I sat on the floor in my living room and tried pushing pine needles into the guide and tried to keep the string tight and keep the needle from sticking my hand. God help me…I’m not going to quit.

I always told my students, “I WOULD RATHER HEAR IT WRONG THAN NOT HEAR IT AT ALL.  I CAN’T FIX WHAT I CAN’T HEAR”.

With that in mind, I kept going.  I stopped tearing it apart when the stitches weren’t right, I quit worrying if the pine needles were perfectly threaded in the device I was given to keep things neat and even.  By the end of my second class, it wasn’t perfect, but it was my best at this time.

It was 3 days before Easter and my basket didn’t even have sides, but I was still proud that I had not quit.  I did notice at my second class, that a few of my new classmates had disappeared from the first class.  I hope they were just busy and didn’t quit.

Since I wasn’t going to be finished with my basket for Easter, I did the next best thing….

I contacted my new friend and bought one! If you decide you would rather just buy a pine needle basket.  I have a new friend I’ve met here in North Carolina who makes baskets. She is also a singer and is still in a choir.  I bought one for myself for my birthday with a North Carolina Blue Bird on it.  She and her friend have a Facebook page called K & B Basketreee.  They make great gifts and they will ship them to you.

If you would like to try your hand at basket making, you might want to consider using my links to purchase these items. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

I like the pine straw that still has the bottoms on it.  I cut them off before I make the basket.  I’m also lucky to live in a neighborhood that has a ton of this on the ground, so it is free.

These tools help me to cut the waxy string, pull out stitches when I screw up.  I also like having the circles to keep my rows the same thickness.

Pick any color you like!

These are also helpful.  The ones in my sewing kit were too small.  Go Figure!

If you decide you would rather just buy a pine needle basket.  I have a new friend I’ve met here in North Carolina who makes baskets. She is also a singer and is still in a choir.  I bought one for myself for my birthday with a North Carolina Blue Bird on it.  She and her friend have a Facebook page called K & B Basketree.  They make great gifts and they will ship them to you.

Learning to create a website.

Learning to create a website.

What a new adventure!  In January, I tried to learn how to build websites.  Here are a few to take a look at.  It has been and continues to be a challenge, but I love learning new things, sharing with others, teaching others, and continuing to be a difference-maker in the lives of those whose paths I cross.

Public Archaeology Corps – Current Volunteer Tech Coordinator

Oasis Organizers – built for choir alum Kim Dalton Osborn

Team Leadership Development – built for a colleague from the Illinois Principals Association with a side business for coaches and athletes.

Isybilla Gee Site – a teenager I met at the Public Archaeology Corps that published a book at the ripe old age of 16.

 

 

Welcome to the websites I have built.

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