Showing posts with label mothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mothers. Show all posts

Friday, March 3, 2017

Mothers Day picture

Mothers Day picture


I told my kids for Mothers Day I wanted a good picture of them.
together. 
with the real camera. 

Most of my attempts looked like
this

or this.

But eventually with lots of bribery, some patience and a roaring dinosaur I got these gems. 


My loves. 
Being a mom is the very best. 

Hope all you Mommas had a Happy Mothers Day! 

Available link for download

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Thursday, February 23, 2017

Mothers Day Printable

Mothers Day Printable


I always, always forgot that international Mothers day falls on every second Sunday of May. Please excuse my lack of Mothers day related printable/craft. Im hitting my head on the keyboard right now. 78#$^%!jasrey 6asd$%&*^&@s$d^*a&a34mp;  *  )jfh~#al#ir  ... There you go. I ruined my keyboard.

But, if youre also a last minute lovers like me (no offense, Mom, I always love you, no matter how big a procrastinator I am), I have these two cards available for you to download. TWO! for Free!! Please make you choice and pick a card more suitable to your moms aesthetics preference. You dont have to even leave your seat now, just download and print. And we all know, although your effort is minimum, your love for mother is to the max. Agreed? Cheers for Mothers!

this one right here. 


And this one right here.

What are you planning on Mothers day? Do you have any DIY ideas to surprise her? 

Available link for download

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Sunday, February 19, 2017

mothers day tea party

mothers day tea party



Hey friends!

Mother's Day is this weekend, and I'm here to remind you: BE NICE TO YOUR MOMMA. Send a card, an email, nice flowers, or whatever to thank her for all the hard work that is being a mom. And if you're lucky enough to live close to your mom, I suggest pulling out the big guns, skipping the traditional Mother's Day brunch, and whipping her up an English style tea party instead!

Admittedly I'm not an expert on English tea, but I've watched enough of The Great British Bake-Off to fake my way around the table. At my tea, there will be some sort of meringue, a Victoria sponge, and a light, refreshing beverage.


So on Crate and Barrel's awesome blog, I've got three recipes for the perfect Mother's Day tea party. Think — mini lemon meringue tartlets, hibiscus Arnold Palmer lemonade, and a strawberry shortcake trifle repping the Victoria sponge.

Who needs high tea at the Ritz when you can make it at home?

And on that note — Happy (early) Mother's Day, mom! Wish I could spend it with you eating these desserts.

get the recipe »

Available link for download

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Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Mothers Day

Mothers Day


Tomorrow is Mothers Day. The sacred bonds of motherhood extend beyond the biological act of conception and birth. It is the protection and healing, the shelter and love. The sharing of the feminine energy in the world. All humans have some of it, women generally have more, mothers specialize. But if you have a teacher, neighbor, co-worker, sister...anyone who has warmed you with their heart in this very special way, please reach out to them. You never have any idea how much a simple "thank you" can mean to someone who feels forgotten or unappreciated, who has given her heart to the world and wonders what it all means. Tell them it means everything. And if you are fortunate to have a mother in any biological, social or personal sense...and she is still here...treasure her, and be certain that she knows you do. I bless my own mother, Eva Mae Reeves, for giving me birth and raising me. My sister Joyce for loving me and teaching me to read. Nickis Mom Toni for being so much more than my friend and love...for giving me hope when I needed it most, and a darling daughter to boot. For Patricia Stevens Due for giving birth to the love of my life. And to Tananarive, who brought me my son, for whom Id waited a lifetime. And walks with me every step of this punishing, miraculous, beautiful journey called life. I love you all.

Available link for download

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Sunday, February 5, 2017

Mothers Day Special Blog n Vid Flyin Mommas!

Mothers Day Special Blog n Vid Flyin Mommas!


#mothersday #avgeek #aviation #blog

mom, momma, mommy, ma, 2013


Today we honor those daring young women in their flyin machines!

This pilot biz is tough enough as it is.  Wannabe pilots spend years of training and tens of thousands of dollars on the mere hope of a successful airline career.  But, historically, this has been a notoriously "macho" business.  From before the days of Amelia Earhart, "aviatrixes" have had to contend with that great glass ceiling in the sky—every single day they strap into the cockpit.

To that end, today we honor those women—many of them mommies—who have had a hand in this tough business.  Some are pilots, some are flight attendants, some are "stay at home pilots wives"...but ALL have overcome the odds to "make it!"


Karlene Petitt, over at "Flight to Success" (http://karlenepetitt.blogspot.com), is an A330 pilot for a major U.S. airline, and is a very prolific blogger and succesful author of the novel, Flight for Control.  In her own words: "A wife of 31 years, mother of 3 gorgeous daughters, grandmother of Kadence, Miles, Khoyn, Carter, Ellis and Anthony. A pilot for 8 airlines, 7 type ratings, 2 masters degrees, and my 1st novel, Flight For Control, is published!"  Mrs. Petitt is now working on the first sequel, Flight For Safety.

Just this past week on our wildly popular BLOGGING IN FORMATION series, Mrs. Petitt wrote about her struggles as a female dreaming to be a pilot, in a time when "girls dont fly."  Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/bp534ye





Heres to YOU, Mommy Petitt!
—and, where do you find the time?

————————

mom, momma, mommy, ma, 2013, airline, aviation, avgeek, A330

Joanna over at "Daddy...Daddy, Come Back!" (http://comebackdaddy.blogspot.com/) and "Pilot Wife Healthy Minute Meals" (http://pilotwifehealthyminutemeals.blogspot.com/) blogs quite candidly about the life of a pilots wife and mommy—warts and all.  Her life is not for the faint hearted!


Happy Mommys Day, Joanna!

————————

mom, momma, mommy, ma, 2013, airline, aviation, avgeek, A330

Another aviation blogger and mommy is the host of one of my all-time favorite blogs...Miss TWA of http://misstwa.blogspot.com.  Shes got a wonderful, zany, haphazard writing style that is sure to put a smile on any readers face...


even if we all really do "Miss TWA!"

Happy Mothers Day, Miss T!

————————


And no aviation mommies list would be complete without a salute to our intrepid "waitresses in the sky"—who in real life are highly trained and poised to save your lily a$$es in an inflight emergency—the Flight Attendant!


I would especially like to thank one of my personal favorites, Mary "Mug" Ann, who has been specially trained to serve ol Capn Aux his coffee in a preheated mug!  Uh, that is, as long as Capn Aux is nice to her first!

 


Between flying the often un-friendly skies and rasing her three rambunctious, twenty-something boys, Ms. Ann finds the time to be a competetive body builder—who consistently places in the Top 3!

Happy Mothers Day, Mary Mug!

————————


 airline, aviation, avgeek, A320, novel, best seller

Mary Mugs eldest son, Gino, is the talented graphic designer of the excellent new cover for The Last Bush Pilots!

And speaking of the Last Bush Pilots, one of my readers most beloved characters is a female "aviatrix" trying to cut a respectable niche in the notoriously macho bush pilot world—while escaping a dangerous past.

Well wrap up this tribute to our favorite female aviators with her story:

(Warning: this story is seriously PG-13+!)



CHAPTER 8:  Veronica Onassis Redding

The day her husband backhanded her into the china cabinet was not the day she left him.  Nor was it the time he bragged to her of the many waitresses on his truck route impatiently awaiting his services.  Nor the day he forced her to bare her breasts in front of his buddies to show off his prized property.  Not even the time he threw his plate of roast turkey back at her for being too cold, sending her to the emergency room for eight stitches to the forehead.  Afterward, she apologized to him for being so clumsy and inattentive to his needs, and he forgave her by mounting her briefly until getting off.
For Veronica Redding to leave her loving husband, it nearly took suicide.
Ever since she was a kid, Veronica dreamed of flying.  She would sit on her father’s shoulders and stick her arms out to each side, blonde locks flying and lips Brrr-ing as he trotted through the park.  When she was five, he took her on a small plane tour over their home town of Los Angeles.
Veronica was awestruck.  All those cars below looked like toy matchboxes, the people like ants.  The thrill of accelerating and pulling away from the earth’s gravity, like an angel flying to heaven.  And, perhaps most thrilling of all, the powerful aircraft responded so obediently to the pilot’s commands.  It was nothing short of magic.  She trembled with delight when, after the flight, the grey-haired pilot pinned a pair of plastic wings to her blouse.
Little did Daddy know, from that day on the hook was set.  Veronica was determined to become a pilot.
Later, Sergeant Robert Redding, U.S. Army, realized how serious his daughter was of the fool notion.  He sat her down on his knee and explained.
He said, “Honey, girls don’t become pilots.  All pilots come from the Air Force or the Army or Navy.  There is no such thing as an airline aviatrix.”
“But what about Amelia Earhart, Daddy?  She did it,” she said.
He laughed.  “Sure, and look what happened.  Her dingy, female sense of direction got herself lost at sea.”
At high school, guidance counselors, male and female alike, also urged her to reconsider her crazy dream and instead become something more palatable with society.  Say, a homemaker or a nurse.
But their “sage advice” clashed head-on with her dream, and she would have nothing of it.
One night at the dinner table, the Sergeant learned of the counsellors’ talk and his daughter’s disappointment.  He said, “Look, if you really want to fly, why not become a stewardess?”
Mother lay a hand on hers.  “Your father’s right, dear.  Who knows?  Maybe you could find a rich husband that way, maybe even a real pilot.”
Shaking her head, she said, “I don’t wanna marry a pilot.  I want to be a pilot.”
He slammed his fork down.  “Enough of this nonsense,” her father snapped.
“Now, Sam,” her mother interjected.  “Let’s not—”
“She’ll do what I tell her to do,” he said.
“Yes, sir,” Mother said meekly.
Veronica threw her fork down.  “I’ll do what I want, goddamnit!”  She bit her lip, too late to catch the slip.
Crimson-faced, the Sergeant raised up, his shadow eclipsing her small frame.  He slapped her so hard she fell to the floor.
“Go to your room,” he boomed, “and don’t come out till you stop talking your idiotic little girl nonsense.”
Veronica sat at her vanity mirror, eyeing the welt as it grew and colored on the side of her face.  Out of the corner of her eye, she spotted the plastic wings pinned to the wooden frame.
Perhaps Daddy was right, she thought.  Girls, especially stupid ones like little Veronica Redding, didn’t have the capacity to become pilots.  She blushed in shame.  She yanked the wings off, tossed them in the bottom drawer and mumbled, “Might as well try to be an astronaut.”
She became despondent, lost, a plane without a rudder.  Her grades dropped.  Each night she came home late, in deliberate defiance of her father’s authority.  He spanked her, whipped her, grounded her; she would sneak out again.  Each confrontation drove the wedge further between the two.  After her high school graduation party, she didn’t come home until late the next day, still drunk.
“You’re impossible, young lady,” her father screamed between belt straps.  “What you need is boot camp.  First thing Monday morning, we’re taking you to the recruiters and you’re joining the Army.  Teach you some discipline.  Hah!  Try telling them you want to be a pilot.”
That Monday, Veronica snuck out early, withdrew her life savings from the bank, and left.  Plastic wings pinned to her backpack, she stuck a thumb out on the interstate.
She was seventeen, but a very naive and sheltered seventeen.  She was heartbroken, scared, lonely.  And strangely relieved.
Liberated, somehow.  She could go anywhere, do anything, be anyone.  Her destiny lay in the power of her own tiny hands.  Remembering her silly old dream, she chuckled.  “Hell, I could even become an aviatrix,” she mumbled with a roll of the eyes.  But she knew she was too poor and too stupid.  Daddy had made sure she knew that.
In a truck stop between Tulsa and Oklahoma City, her plans—and her life—derailed.
His name was John Bolt, and like his namesake, he struck her like lightning.  He was tall, handsome, suave and worldly.  He had traveled all over the States in his rig, and he made it sound as exciting as a flying circus.
Spellbound, she lost herself in his endless, dark brown eyes.  From beneath a crop of slick black hair, they blazed at her with enthusiasm.
With one comment, he hooked her.  He said, “Drivin’ a big rig’s like bein’ captain of an airplane.”
Bolt bought the starving, wide-eyed girl a slice of lemon meringue pie and reeled her in.  He said, “You’re your own boss.  You take orders from nobody.  And you can go damn well wherever you please.”  He sat back and crossed his arms.  “Hell, it ain’t no big thing.  Why a cute little missy like you could do it.”
Drive an eighteen-wheeler!  So maybe it wasn’t an airplane, she thought, but it seemed the closest she’d ever get.  That night she left with him.
In the same night, she learned to drive a big rig and please a man.
The next two months were pure bliss.  Everything seemed so right.  In Reno, days after her eighteenth birthday, Miss Veronica Redding became Mrs. John Bolt.  His next road trip became their honeymoon, after which he moved her into his small Ulysses, Kansas trailer.
She called her parents to tell them the good news.  Against her mother’s pleas, the Sergeant hung up on her.  Abandoned, all she had left was her new husband.
But Mr. Bolt soon tired of the new Mrs. Bolt.  He began leaving her at home on trips.  And when he returned, his home never seemed to be in the order he liked.  She could do nothing right by him.  The young bride’s cooking was atrocious, he told her, and any decision on her part turned into disaster.  He made sure she knew, both physically and mentally, that he had married a worthless mess.
For six years she endured his abuse.  She couldn’t remember a world without John Bolt.  Each time he left on a trip, she dreaded his return yet longed for it, never knowing whether he would walk through the door bearing flowers or fists.  She filled the void of his absence with cigarettes and alcohol and food.  Over the years, she loaded her thin frame down with pounds of physical and emotional baggage.
His trips became longer.  Days went by without a phone call.  Finally, after two weeks away without a word, he called to tell her he’d picked up yet another run.
“When will you come home?” she asked him, her voice pleading, her words slurred by vodka.
“Come home to what?” he snapped.  “A fat, drunken pig in a stye?  I’ll be back sometime next week, if I feel like it.  Hell, I may never feel like it.”  He hung up.
She flew into a blind rage.  Minutes later, she sat crumpled on the floor in a pile of shattered dishes, broken ceramic statuettes and smashed bottles of booze.  Through the alcoholic fog and the raining tears, she realized that, upon seeing the mess, he would kill her.  Or worse, leave her for good.
Might as well spare him the pain, she thought.
She crawled through the rubble to John’s gun cabinet.  With trembling fist, she pounded the glass until it shattered.  She did not feel her sliced palm.  When she retracted her hand, it held an ancient Colt .45 handgun, loaded.  She put it to her head.
Everything went dark.
She was an angel now, her spirit flying away from her dead, battered human carcass, up through the roof and into the heavens.  She looked down and saw John Bolt.  He yelled at her to come back down, fists shaking above his head in rage.  But from way up here, her husband’s voice sounded comically high.  His rig looked like a matchbox, and he like an ant.
She woke up laughing.  She had no idea how long she had passed out.  Veronica looked at her hand.  The glass cuts, while deep, wouldn’t be permanent.  She stared at the pistol for one long minute.  She again lifted it and aimed, this time at a photo hanging on the wall.  A photo of John Bolt.
She pulled the trigger.  The rusty hammer jammed.  She looked at the gun quizzically.  Suddenly, the hammer dropped.  A loud explosion ripped through her ears.  The kick knocked the pistol from her hand.  Once again everything went dark; the bullet had hit the table lamp.
Her mouth, open in astonishment, slowly changed to a faint smile, then a larger one, then a Cheshire grin.  The grin turned to a chuckle, then a laugh.  She guffawed hysterically, rolling on the floor, her hands wrapped about her stomach.
She picked herself off the floor, walked to the bathroom, and showered for the last time in John Bolt’s home.  She dressed the wounds on her hand, then dug through her junk drawer.
Finally she found it, buried in the back.  Her most prized possession:  her plastic wings.  She pinned them to her chest.
She wrote him a ’Dear John’ letter.  This note, however, read slightly different:

Dear Auntie Em,
Hate you.  Hate Kansas.  Left for Oz.
Dorothy

In three days she hocked his car, pawned his furniture, cleaned out his bank account and maxed every credit card with cash advance.  That done, she took one final look around the wrecked and deserted home.
“To hell with you,” she said, and left for the farthest place from Kansas she could think of:  Alaska.
From Anchorage she called her mother.  Her father grabbed the receiver and yelled, “It was unforgivable of you to marry that man without our consent.  But even so, a wife should be loyal to her husband under any circumstances.  And now you have the gall to call us and blame him for your failure.”
This time it was she who hung up.
Divorce was foremost on her mind, but she feared the proceedings would flush her out.  To her great relief, she found that her marriage had never existed; there had been a previous Mrs. John Bolt, and still was.
Nevertheless, she knew her life was still in danger.  She cut and dyed her California locks and became just another Alaska brunette.  But appearance alone was not enough to escape him.
By court order of the State of Alaska, Miss Veronica Onassis Redding became Miss Holly Shannon Innes.
At an abuse crisis center in Fairbanks, Holly Innes began intense therapy.  But more than shrink sessions and weight loss regimens were needed to rebuild her.
Her counselor quickly found the key.  At Fairbanks International Airport, he enrolled her in flight school.
The change was dramatic and immediate.  Her first day of flying did more for her mental recovery than a year of therapy.  The booty snatched from John Bolt paid for lessons.  How appropriate, she thought, to use a nightmare to bankroll a dream.
After her first solo flight, she wept tears of joy.

For more info and more sample chapters, visit http://lastbushpilots.com
To view and order on Amazon:
—in Print: https://www.createspace.com/4053153
—on Kindle/ebook: http://goo.gl/yVHJV
50% of proceeds go to Alaska charity!

and now...
"Sunrise at Altitude"

A special video tribute to our wonderful moms out there!

Direct link: http://youtu.be/355idJjmvkY

——————

This post is dedicated to the life of my wonderful momma Lois
L-R: Birthday brother Allen, sis Patty, Capn Aux, Momma Aux, birthday brother Gary
And, Happy Birthday to my Brothers Aux!

Heres to all of you wonderful "Aviatrixes!"
mom, momma, mommy, ma, 2013, airline, aviation, avgeek, A330

Happy Mothers Day!
————————————

Posting May 15 @ 11:00 PHX:
Capn Aux answers readers Qs—Part IV, 2.0

airbus, airline, pilot, aviation, avgeek, blog, novel, best seller, capnaux, capn aux

Weve waited long enough—
Heres the final round!

Sample Questions:
—What was the funniest thing that ever happened to you on a flight?
—Have you flown any celebrities?

——————————
Posting May 27 @ 11:00 PHX:
A Memorial Day Special
Missing Man Formation.

An Encore Presentation.
———————

JOIN CAPN AUX ON:

           
http://www.facebook.com/CapnAux                            http://twitter.com/capnaux


                       
AMAZON: http://goo.gl/yVHJV         http://www.youtube.com/user/capnauxblog


VISIT THE LAST BUSH PILOTS HOME PAGE

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Saturday, February 4, 2017

Mothers Day FREEBIE

Mothers Day FREEBIE


After a bit of a break Im back today with some news and a FABULOUS new FREEBIE! 
Its a beautiful, very FULL collection for hosting a wonderful Mothers Day celebration! Can you believe it? Its already time to plan a special day for those wonderful moms in our lives.

This collection is so bright and cheery and perfect for Mothers Day brunches, luncheons or even creating a beautiful flower arrangement. 
Heres the full list of what is included:

- "Happy Mothers Day" banner
- Chevron pattern blank food tent cards or placecards
- 2" logos for cupcake toppers
- 2.5" background designs for cupcake toppers
- 1" logos for toothpick embellishments
- Drink wraps
- Napkin wraps
- 3 different cupcake wraps
- Hershey Kiss circles (to use with a 3/4" circle punch)
- Fill in Mothers Day Brunch invitation
- Fill in Mothers Day Lunch invitation
- Blank Mothers Day Brunch invitation
- Blank Mothers Day Lunch invitation
- Blank Menu card
- "Happy" "Mothers" "Day" yard picks
- "Happy Mothers Day" door sign
- Centerpiece picks
- "Happy Mothers Day" tags
- 3 colored straw or toothpick flags
- 5 coordinating paper patterns 

DOWNLOAD THE MOTHERS DAY
PRINTABLE SET












Enjoy!


Available link for download

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Monday, January 30, 2017

Mothers Day Quiz

Mothers Day Quiz


Life is a puzzle and we - moms - are experts at solving it with logic, humor, and numbers. This quiz by The Math Mom is celebrating moms who are wise, glamorous, efficient, and funny. Motherhood experience is required to answer. The Quiz was originally posted on boston.com

Puzzle #1: Handbag Mania


Mothers, daughters, grandmothers - we all have our passions. One mother could not go to the store without buying a handbag. Leather, plastic, cloth - she loved them all. When asked after a recent shopping expedition "How many did you buy?" she answered: "Three quarters of their number plus three quarters of a bag." How many did she purchase?
Choices: 
  • 30 
  • 13 
  • None
Think a bit, then scroll down to see the answer.









Correct answer is 3. 
Three quarters of their number plus three quarters of a bag is:  3/4 times 3 + 3/4 = 3



Puzzle #2: Mom vs Dad Race.


Mom and Dad are running on a high school track, but in opposite directions. They notice that their meeting point keeps shifting by three steps in the direction Mom is running. Who is a faster runner?

Choices: 
  • Mom
  • Dad
Image by Ed Yourdon, distributed under CCL.











Correct answer: Mom, she does the whole track distance plus three steps while dad is running the track distance minus three steps in between their meeting times around the track.



Puzzle #3: Speedy Breakfast



You are making grilled cheese sandwiches on a pan that is just wide enough for two slices of bread. It takes 1 minute to grill one side of each sandwich. Can you make three of those sandwiches in just 3 minutes and send your kids out of the door just in time for the school bus?


Choices: 
  • Sure you can; 
  • No, you need at least 4 minutes. Gotta drive the kids yourself.









Correct answer: Sure you can. This is tricky. Name the sandwiches A, B, and C. 
Minute 1: Grill one side of sandwiches A and B. 
Minute 2: Grill the second side of sandwich A and the first side of sandwich C. Sandwich A is ready. 
Minute 3: Grill the second sides of sandwiches B and C. All three sandwiches are ready.





Puzzle #4: Cookies Heaven


Twelve mothers from a kids activity class decide to get acquainted through a baking party. They agree that each will bring homemade or store-bought cookies to share and each will try one cookie from everyone else. While tasting each others cookies, each pair will have a little chat getting to know each other. How many cookies are consumed altogether at this party?

Choices: 
  • 12
  • 63
  • 132
  • 144









Correct answer: 132. 
Each of the 12 moms tried 11 cookies that the other moms brought: 12 x 11 = 132



Puzzle #5: Eggs for Breakfast


To make breakfast for yourself, you bring a big pot of water to a boil and then boil one egg for 4 minutes. How long would it take you to boil five eggs to feed your whole family?

Choices: 
  • 4 minutes 
  • 8 minutes 
  • 20 minutes








Correct answer: 4 minutes. 
The boiling time is the same if you put all the eggs in the pot at the same time.




Puzzle #6: Sport for Moms


You are a soccer mom, a swim mom, a lacrosse mom, a runners wife, a Shape Magazine subscriber, and have a family gym membership. Does this guarantee that you can look your family physician in the eye and say that you get enough exercise?

Choices: 
  • Sure: Soccer, swimming, lacrosse, running, gym - you are obviously well aware of the importance of physical activity!
  • Absolutely not: Just because you make time for others to play sports doesnt mean you have time to do it yourself!









Correct answer is: Absolutely not!



Puzzle #7: Your Good Night Sleep


What are your chances of a good night sleep if there is 30 percent probability that your baby will cry in the middle of the night, a 20 percent probability that your son will have nightmares and come into your room, and a 10 percent chance that your husband will be snoring after the giant steak he consumed at dinner?

Choices: 
  • Zero
  • 50 percent
  • 70 percent
Image by Micah Taylor, distributed under CCL.











Correct answer: 50 percent. For you to have a good night sleep none of these events should occur. No crying AND no nightmares AND no snoring = 0.7 times 0.8 times 0.9 = 0.504 or about 50 percent.



Puzzle #8: A Working Holiday


This may have happened to you. Take Veterans Day, Martin Luther King Day, Presidents Day - or any other holiday observed by your childs day care but not observed by some private companies. If both you and your spouse work and you have not lined up a babysitter, you are facing a puzzling day. Assuming you have flexible hours, can you arrange the day so that you and your spouse will each work an 8-hour day and split childcare?


Choices: 
  • Yes
  • No








Correct answer: Yes. All three go to sleep at the same time. Mom and Dad wake up after 8 hours of sleep. There are 16 hours are left in the day. Mom watches the child for 8 hours while Dad works for 8 hours. Then, dad watches the child for the remaining 8 hours while Mom works for 8 hours.




Puzzle #9: A Rotten Egg


You buy a dozen eggs. After a few days, you notice that just a few are left and you buy a dozen more. You fill up all the empty egg spots in your refrigerator, then refill and buy more as necessary. But if you dont keep track properly, some will get rotten before you eat them. Which practice will leave you with some rotten eggs?


Choices: 
  • Pick eggs for use from the right side of the refrigerator, shift eggs to empty spots to the right, refill egg on the left.
  • Leave eggs in the cartoon. When you buy a new cartoon, put it under the old one.
  • Mark eggs with numbers using a pencil.
  • Just pick eggs randomly, refill empty spots when you buy new eggs.







Correct answer: Random picking. If you pick eggs randomly and refill empty spots with new eggs, there may be a stinking rotten egg that never got picked.





Puzzle #10: Im a mother, Im a sinner, Im a saint. 


Remember the song by Alanis Morissette? You are a professional woman (20 percent of the time), a mother (20 percent of the time), a wife (10 percent of the time), a daughter (5 percent of the time), a sleeping angel (25 percent of the time), a good friend (3 percent of the time), a line cook (4 percent of the time), a house maid (5 percent of the time), a self-indulging queen (3 percent of the time), a neurotic guilt-ridden mess (2 percent of the time), and a driver (3 percent of the time). Is this all possible?

Choices: 
  • Yes
  • No



Correct answer: Yes. Of course the answer is yes! We all do it, somehow.

Happy Mothers Day!


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