I have always been fascinated by shoes. When I find a pair that fits, I often buy the same style in a different color. You can’t have too many shoes, can you?
History cannot pinpoint exactly how or where the first shoes actually evolved. However, I am convinced that the process was probably spurred on by early cave women, egging their menfolk to develop something that fit better, felt better—and looked better than what their neighbor was flaunting when she emerged from her cavern to pick berries and gather firewood.
Various sources state that the very first footwear that resembled shoes were found in drawings on Spanish cave walls some 15,000 years ago. The crude shoes were merely baglike wrappings made of animal fur and skins that may have been padded with grass and leaves and were worn in the cold regions or on hazardous terrain.
The first know footwear in warm surroundings consisted of sandals made of plant fibers or leather. The ancient Egyptians wore sandals as early as 3700 B.C. along with the ancient Greeks and Romans. In China, people wore wooden-soled shoes and cloth shoes for thousands of years. American Indians developed leather moccasins long before European settlers arrived.
Somehow through the ages, shoes have become a part of people’s clothing; and fashion often determines the style of shoes a person wears along with the climate and a person’s occupation and activities.
HERE ARE SOME REAL FUN FACTS (with credit to ShopSmart):
According to Consumer Reports National Research Center for ShopSmart magazine, the average American woman has 19 pairs of shoes. But she only wears four pairs regularly and one quarter of the average woman’s shoes have only been worn once!
On an average, a female from ages 13-16 may own about 15 pair of shoes including sneakers. And older woman 16-21, who perhaps has a job: 25-40 pairs. A mature woman 25-+, anywhere from 40-60 pair of shoes.
Thirty-three percent, or one third, of women have trouble finding the room to store all of their shoes.
Close to half of the female population (43%) has been injured, at least moderately by their shoes.
Sixty percent of women have regretted a shoe purchase.
So, tell me, what’s on your feet and what’s in your closet?
The things I think and write today in blog posts, I will keep. And when I'm old and read them. . .will I laugh or will I weep?
Friday, July 11, 2014
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Happy Birthday, America!
Independence Day, better known as the Fourth of July, is the birthday of the United States of America. It is celebrated on July 4th each year in states and territories
of the United
States
and is the anniversary of the day on which the Declaration of Independence was
adopted by the Continental Congress—July 4, 1776.
The founders of our new nation and thirteen colonies considered
Independence Day an important occasion for rejoicing. The first Independence
Day was observed in Philadelphia on July 8,
1776. The Declaration was read, bells were rung, bands
played, and the population rejoiced. In early day, Independence Days were occasions
for shows, games, sports, military music, and fireworks.
The exuberant use of fireworks and the firing of funs
and cannons caused deaths and injuries in the early days. By the 1900s, people
began a movement toward a “safe and sane” Fourth. Cities across our nation
passed laws forbidding the sale of fireworks unless trained people were hired
to explode them.
In 1941, Congress declared July 4th a
federal legal holiday. Today, many communities stress the patriotic importance of
the holiday and celebrate with programs, pageants, games and plays, athletic
contests and picnics.
Happy Birthday America!
Monday, June 23, 2014
THE ART OF LOVE AND MURDER - by Brenda Whiteside
I'm pleased to
present an excerpt of Brenda Whiteside's new book, The Art of Love and
Murder, published in April 2014 by The Wild Rose Press. It is "Book
One" in the Love and Murder Series.
Although she didn’t start out to
write romance, Brenda found all good stories involve complicated human
relationships. She has also found no matter a person’s age, a new discovery is
right around every corner. Whether humorous or serious, straight contemporary
or suspense, all her books revolve around those two facts.
In celebration of the release of The Art of Love and Murder, Brenda is offering a $25 Amazon Gift
Card. Please take time to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway at the bottom of the
blog post.
EXCERPT:
Momentarily struck dumb by his eye color, she stared
back. Why hadn’t she noticed until now? Although not as light as hers or her
father’s, the professor’s eyes were a startling green shade.
His hand nudged her arm. “Lacy?”
She jumped. “Oh, yes.” She slipped the tissue from
the half-carved wolf. Another glance at his eyes
and goose bumps riddled her arms.
He lifted the wood close to his face, using both
hands as if handling a delicate hummingbird. His thumb traced the neck of the
creature to the juncture of where it emerged from the wood. When he brought the
piece to his nose, closing his eyes and breathing deeply, Lacy wanted to turn
away from the oddly erotic gesture.
He swallowed, opened his eyes and set the wolf back
on the tissue. His attention shifted to the photograph of the chest. He touched
the photo, a smile on his lips. “Where is the chest?”
The chest. Like he knew it, had seen it before. “I’m
having it sent. You’ve seen it before?”
He didn’t move, stared out the window as if deep in
thought. “I’d like to show you something, Lacy.”
“All right.” She waited, watching his profile.
He turned and stared into her face a moment. “You’re
so very lovely. A creation full of life and passion, surpassing any art form.”
His hypnotic voice floated on the classical strains
drifting from the living room. She couldn’t speak. Didn’t know what to say.
She’d been lifted upon a pedestal of admiration. With any other man, she might
consider his words a means to a sexual end. The professor’s intentions,
however, were crystal. He admired her like a work of art.
BRENDA ASKS HER READERS:
When it comes to the setting in a story, do you
prefer an imaginary place or the real thing? To date, all my stories have taken
place in real cities. I’ve had to change the names of hotels and restaurants,
but I still pattern them after the real places. I have a friend who writes
paranormal. What I like about her books, well one of the things I like, is her
fantasies take place in real places. Kind of fun to imagine vampires walking
next to me on the streets where I live! So how about you, real or imaginary
places?
BUY LINKS:
The Wild Rose Press
Amazon
ARe
KOBO
Visit Brenda at www.brendawhiteside.com.
Or on FaceBook: www.facebook.com/BrendaWhitesideAuthor
She blogs on the 9th and 24th
of every month at http://rosesofprose.blogspot.com
She blogs about writing and prairie life at http://brendawhiteside.blogspot.com/
Saturday, June 7, 2014
The Rare Month of June
This year, the month of June crept up on us slowly and silently, easing it's way into the summer season, instread of "busting out all over" like the song so aptly implies. It was a chilly spring
with lots of rain, and the foliage and flowers huddled until the last moment to
greet the summer sun.
June is one of my favorite
months. The world is new and green. It’s the time of year when the smell of
roses, lily-of-the-valley, and wisteria linger on the mist as dusk arrives.
It’s the month when you can smell sun-baked hay in the fields and fresh-wet
earth in the gentle rains.
If you close your eyes, you
can hear a repertoire of songs from the birds—the trill of the song sparrows,
the cry of the killdeers and blue jays, the chatter of the chick-a-dees, and
the soft lilt of the whippoorwills. It’s a time when the wind whispers in the
pines and leafy maples, and bobs and bends the tall meadow grasses into
rippling waves.
June is a time of motion and
excitement as butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds juggle for space and a taste
of the blooming flowers. But June is serene and calm when nightfall arrives and
a sliver of a golden moon hangs in the star-filled sky…and the only
interruption in the silence is the tranquil sounds of night insects and tree
frogs serenading each other in the grass.
And what is
so rare as a day in June?
Then, if ever, come perfect days. . .
--From: The Vision of Sir Launfal
Then, if ever, come perfect days. . .
--From: The Vision of Sir Launfal
by James Russell Lowell
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