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    September 06

    Sludge

    Whenever I sit down at the computer and see this blank screen, I begin to think I have to type something worthy on it.  The perfectionist peers over my shoulder and says, "no, don't write that, that's boring."  Most of the time, I agree.  My shoulders start to move closer and closer to my ears, I get a burning sensation in my back muscles, and my brain feels like a wad of wet cotton in my head.  Everything seems so difficult. 

     What if I wrote that the most satisfying thing that happened to me today was getting a call from my work's help desk to say they'd fixed my email?  I know it's not interesting, but it's all I've got.  Maybe if I had experienced today with a different mood floating around in my head, say one like a wispy summer cloud on a blue sky sunny day, I'd have a great insight or a funny story.  But I experienced today with a sludge mood in my head, and sludge moods don't usually give me anything much.  I'd be happy if a sludge mood would make like lava and slide out my brain through my ears and never come back. 

     I started writing this piece at 8:10pm.  I told myself that I would write for twenty minutes and then give myself permission to stop.  It is 8:29pm and I am getting ready to stop.  Aren't you glad?    

    Owls

    This morning I was on the back porch before sunrise.  The trees were black against the gray blue sky.  Something big landed in the branches and then another something big, followed by a third something big.  Three owls perched on the branches for a few moments before they flew away.  I love seeing owls.  My backyard is against a cow pasture and we hear them hooting all the time.  Sometimes we also hear little animals screaming in terror.  Let's face it, owls have to eat.  There must be plenty of mice and other juicy rodents out in that field for them to make a meal out of. 

     

    We had a mouse living inside with us about six months ago.  He would mosey out every now and then and scare me.  I guess I scared him too.  Bandit, my dog, never saw him once.  I guess a dog isn't a cat, so I won't give him too hard a time about it.  Anyway, we decided that we should get rid of him, the mouse, not Bandit, so we bought a mouse trap at the hardware store.  I put a piece of cheese on it and we left it in the kitchen behind the refrigerator.  That mouse never reappeared.  He must have been highly intelligent.  Once, on a plantation tour, we learned that when a hostess wanted to politely get rid of her guests, she would put a pineapple on the end of their beds.  I guess we did the same kind of thing for that mouse, though not as graciously, and he got the message.

     

    I've got to think that seeing three owls, just before dawn, is an auspicious sign.  When I see an owl, I think of wisdom and the number three is notoriously favorable, not to mention spiritual.  But I think the owls would have had to have been white.  I took an art class a few years ago and the Indian teacher explained to me that to see a white owl is good luck.  She also told me to never travel with bananas in my possession and to always step into an airplane, room, boat, bus, you get the idea, with my right foot first.  I do not travel with bananas, but I have never seen a white owl.  So I would say that I am, at best, only preventing bad luck from coming my way.  This is confirmed by the fact that it's evening now and I made it through an average day without harm.  Today may have been the day I was supposed to get run over by a garbage truck, or slip on a banana peel in aisle three, but neither happened.  I'll take that as luck enough.   

    September 05

    Why I Want to Write

     

    I guess one of the questions to ask myself about writing is why I want to write. Now that’s an interesting sentence right there. I typed, “why I want to write.” (I’ve added italics for emphasis so you can get where I’m going.) This implies that I desire to write, but that the desire is not yet actualized.


    Maybe the better question to ask is what stops me from writing? That’s easy, I might not be good at it. I start out with these high expectations of almost effortlessly writing a NY Times bestseller that gets turned into a blockbuster movie.  Of coure, I get to pick the actor who will play my protagonist. This will take up a lot of my time, talking on the phone with the casting director while I’m sipping coffee at my Honolulu vacation home. There will be pressure for the next bestseller. I will be on the interminable journey of getting published again and again. The pressure is already mounting and it’s overwhelming. I can’t do it.


    What if I were on a deserted island and I had a laptop with unlimited battery power? Well, wait, here is an excellent example of sloppy plot work. If I had a laptop, couldn’t I email for help? No, I guess not because I wouldn’t have an internet connection. As an aside, please don’t ask how I got the laptop, I just have it, okay? It’s my hypothetical, not yours. Okay, so, I’m on the deserted island with the magical laptop. Do I write? Yes, I write. Of course, any cretin would write. But not every cretin, before they found themselves on the island, would have experienced this longing, this primordial calling, to form into written words these illusive, at times well-behaved, most times incorrigible, experiences we call feelings. They would probably be perfectly happy to do suduko or watch American Idol.


    I think I would experience a catharsis on the island. All those words and ideas that swirled around in my mind, and some that hung out in my subconscious, would stop by, finally glad to be invited to the party. “Why didn’t you visit before?” I’ll ask them. “Because you were always putting us off, saying that your house wasn’t tidy enough or you didn’t have time to make the perfect meal,” they’ll answer, holding their hands up while giving me a “we-didn’t-get-it-either” shoulder shrug. The act of simply showing up to my work will erode the creative block into a creative channel. I’ll still write some really awful stuff, but I’ll keep writing anyway because I’ll be comforted knowing that there is no chance in hell that anyone, besides me and maybe a monkey or two, and only if they are high up there in terms of evolutionary development, is ever going to read it. I could probably get hung up on what the monkeys will think of my work. But I will cheer myself up with the fact that they are monkeys, and no one would ever take a bad review from a monkey seriously, and I can always bribe them with bananas.


    The question now is whether I realize that I don’t need to be stranded on the deserted island to write. I happen to be stranded right here, right where I am, in this life. I can have an open door policy for all my words and ideas and not bother to invite perfection. And, if I ever want to share what I write, that’s up to me. Otherwise, I will just let the monkeys read it.

    August 26

    Poems

     

    Joy's Light

    Joy’s light dancing round

    my skull,

    not to enter this

    white sepulcher of doom.

    Dark resting place of happiness,

    buried much too soon. 

     

    Grace of Goodbye

    I'm so tired and scared

    of this being

    alone.

     

    When a yellow finch,

    sun drenched,

    zooms by.

    A bright reminder

    of unexpected gifts.

     

    It must be

    the same finch

    I glimpsed last week.

    A tiny gilded flicker

    under the live oak.

    At once darting skyward,

    a small and sacred prayer,

    shot straight to the heart of God.

     

    Dragonfly Dying

    The dragonfly is dying

    to birdsong.

    On his back,

    wings useless now,

    the birds indifferent.

     

    He remembers

    bobbing on the air

    over the colors

    of a dozen different flowers.

     

    All his life he managed

    to avoid the spider's web.

    He smiles.

    The dragonfly is dying

    to birdsong.

    On his back,

    wings useless now,

    the birds indifferent.

     

    How We Travel

    There you go blazing

    while I,

    the mildly troubled traveler,

    stand with my suitcase

    at the curb.

    A stream

    of smoke

    The scent

    of swirling stardust

    resonate of you.

     

    Pilgrims

    "Who is that?

    there, in the darkness,

    bearing a speck of light?"

     

    "It is I,

    a fellow pilgrim,

    sharing in your plight."

     

    "My plight?

    You know nothing of my night."

     

    "Is it for a glimpse of morning

    that you bravely fight?"

     

    "Yes, tis right."

     

    "Then come and share my light.

    We hope for the same sight."

     

    At the Kitchen Sink

    I'm looking at you

    through the window.

    You throw a jagged rock,

    the ugly color of cement.

     

    Shattered transparency

    falling out all over

    cutting bright red wounds

    through who I thought you were.

     

    Good-Bye

    Just as we entwine

    we also unravel.

    Knit together

    till someone pulls the thread

     

    and there's a hole.

    I want to tie a knot,

    pull tight,

    close the gap

    with neat precision.

     

    Instead,

    let's each hold the thread,

    loosely,

    with enough slack left

    for the weaving together again.

     

    July 04

    "You can read this one later!" - Evrim

     
    Getting my husband's clothes to the dry cleaner's is a very long process for me. 
     
    1. Watch shirts piling up on his side of the bed on the floor.
     
    2. Sort the shirts to a pile on the floor, separate from the laundry pile.
     
    3. Watch the pile on the floor for days, thinking, "I should get those to the dry cleaners."
     
    4. Grab a large plastic bag and stuff the shirts into it.  Put the bag by the bedroom door to remind myself to get it to the dry cleaners.
     
    5. Watch the bag for several days.
     
    6. Grab the bag and put it in the trunk.
     
    7. Drive past the dry cleaners a couple of times through the week, thinking, "I should drop those shirts off.  Nah, I'm tired, I'll drop them tomorrow."
     
    8. Decide, "that's it, I'm dropping these damn shirts off," only to find that the dry cleaner closed at 6:30p.m. and it's now 6:45 p.m.
     
    9. Ride around several more days with the clothes in my trunk. 
     
    I am still on step 9.  I hope to get to step 10 today:
     
    10. Drop the clothes off at the dry cleaners while they are open.
     
     
    June 23

    Ping Pong and Passion

    What do I have to say this month? 
     
    Bought a ping pong table.  This has nothing to do with the next two paragraphs, in case you try to make a connection. 
     
    "Perfect love casts out fear," because love and fear cannot co-exist in the same moment.  A missionary who goes to labor in a land of upheavel is only able to go because the love of God, working through him, is stronger than the fear of danger.  When fear overtook Peter, he denied Christ three times.  When love perfected him, in the form of the Holy Spirit surging through him, he fed God's lambs to the very end of his wordly life, when he was crucified upside down.
     
    Love like that can only come from God.  It is based on God's timing and our willingness.  Peter was always willing.  Showing up for everything, always immersed in the moments with Jesus.  Stumbling or striding, or even walking on the water, Peter was passionate.  That passion was spilling out all over the place.  God channeled it and it helped change the world.
     
    What is my passion and how am I allowing God to shape it into my principles?  I am spending some time reflecting on this. 
     
     
     
    May 26

    Two Minutes

     
     
     
    I can't believe a whole month has passed since I've blogged.  Even now, I can't really think of anything to blog about. 
     
    Let's see, two weeks ago I fired my lawn man and hired a new one. 
     
    I have been sitting here for over two minutes since I typed that last sentence, totally stumped for words.  I fully expect another two minutes to pass after I put the period at the end of this sentence.
     
    Yep, another two minutes, nothing.
     
     
    April 27

    Where Does the Time Go?

     
    I tallied my work hours today for the month and I am 30 hours in the red.  This is slightly disconcerting because I only work 22.5 hours a week to begin with, which adds up to about 90 hours a month.  And anyone should be able to make 22.5 hours a week.  I mean, people work 60-80 hour work weeks and raise families.  I am ashamed to admit that I do not even grocery shop or cook. 
     
    I honestly do not know where those 30 hours went.  I know that I had an unusually high amount of doctor visits this month, but, other than that, go figure.  So, I am going to begin monitoring myself.  I am going to print out my calendar every day and see what I have down as "to do."  Then I am going to print out an extra copy that records what was actually "done."  I will be able to spot my time robbers.  I will spot them quickly and irradicate them.
     
    This 30 hours to make up in 3 days feels overwhelming, especially when 2 of the 3 days fall on a weekend.  I probably won't make it.  I will take the pay cut.  (I hope my husband isn't reading this.) 
     
    To make this even funnier, or sadder, depending on how you look at it, I was at Starbucks today with my friend and we were talking about where we would like to volunteer.  Volunteer!   Perhaps a more realistic aspiration would be to make my 22.5 hour work week.   As I type this, reality just gave me another big bang on the head.  Perhaps going to Starbucks for an hour and a half on a work afternoon is a time robber?  But I work from home and I get lonely.  And thirsty.  And it is so pretty out this week.  And you only live once.
     
    I will keep you posted on my progress.  Unless I'm too embarrassed to fess up to what I am really up to.  Especially since there's the slightest chance my husband could be reading this.
     
     
    April 24

    15 pound star!

     
     
    I earned my 15 pound star at Weight Watchers last week.  If you add those 15 pounds to the 15 pounds I lost when I was in Texas, I am down 30 pounds.  More to go, and I will do it.  The road is winding and there are dangers around each bend, including a wine tasting tonight and a powerful craving for chocolate yesterday. 
     
    My friends are moving away and that is another chance for me to pick up the fork for solace.  I am not going to say I can get through life changes without a slip-up.  But I am going to incorporate some new coping mechanisms.  One will be the iPod and the other drinking.   Are AA meetings like Weight Watcher meetings? 
    April 18

    Study Guides

     
    Whenever I try and order my Starbucks drink, I get very confused and it comes out all jumbled.  So, the other afternoon, one of the baristas was nice enough to give me "Make It Your Drink, 2005 Guide to Starbucks Beverages."  My drink, said properly is: "Triple Decaf Grande Non-Fat 2 Splenda Latte."  Or, some days, it could be a "Double Decaf Tall Non-Fat 1 Splenda Latte."  Sometimes I go with the "Triple 2/3 Decaf Grande Non-Fat 2 Splenda Latte," or the "Double 1/2 Decaf Tall Non-Fat 1 splenda Latte."  If I want to sound ultra versed, I could say "skinny" instead of "non-fat."  Actually, I may have to switch to skinny because just saying "skinny" is affirmation that I will indeed be skinny if I order skinny drinks.  I will be splendidly skinny.  Before my calorie-counting days, things were much simpler.  I ordered a "Tall Chai Latte" or a "Grande Caramel Macchiato."  The more words, the less calories.  
     
    Today, my cup has "The Way I See It, # 221."  I can't see it his way (that is, Carlos Rivera's way, who is the General manager of CoopeTarrazu) because he sees it in Spanish and I can't read Spanish.  But I'm sure it's a very positive quote about coffee-farming in Costa Rica.
     
     
     
     
     
     
    April 12

    The Lure of the Cookie

     
     
    Gained .6 of a pound today.  Makes me wonder if a chocolate chip cookie weights .1 of a pound.  I ate six of them in a row yesterday.  Six!  And not the mindful Zen-like eating where I sat down with a cup of coffee (or glass of milk for you milk lovers) and savored all six.  That might have been almost excusable and worth .6 of a pound.  This was binge eating at its best.  Standing in front of the counter, snatching the cookies off their cooling rack and stuffing them in my mouth.  I never really thought I was a binge eater.  Whenever I heard stories of people eating whole containers of ice cream in one sitting, or squirting chocolate syrup into their mouth, I always secretly scoffed at their level of lack of control.  Even now, I don't think six cookies equals a pint of ice cream or a sixteen ounce bottle of Hershey's Syrup.   Okay, I'm still in denial.  What amount of cookies equals a binge?  Probably any amount that is eaten from a sense of scarcity within. 
     
    I had had a particularly difficult day.   I got up and could not eat my usual breakfast of bran cereal with fresh raspberries and blueberries because I had to get my blood drawn.  Once at the lab, the nurse with the word "volunteer" on her badge unsuccessfully stuck me twice, twisting the needle each time, all the while telling me what beautiful skin I had, "just like peaches and cream."  Another nurse finally took the needle and pricked the other arm and got the business done with. 
     
    On the way home, I made an unplanned stop at the Starbucks drivethru and purchased a Grande, Two Shots Decaf, One Shot Caf, Two Splenda, Non Fat Latte.  Then onto McDonalds for an Egg McMuffin.  I mean, come on, I hadn't eaten all morning and had a traumatic blood letting experience.  I needed sustenance!  
     
    Back home to work, full of Starbucks and McDonalds, only to find that email was not cooperating.  I suspect I couldn't get it open because it's stuffed full of messages, along with their attachments, dating back to 2004.  After insanely rebooting the computer a half dozen times, I finally gave in and called the Help Desk.  They wanted to know if I had rebooted the computer.  Come on, that's all I know how to do?  If something isn't working, I cut it off from the power source and turn it back on.  Sometimes it seems to jump start the computer's brain.  If rebooting had worked, I wouldn't be on the phone now, would I?  I could tell my helper was not feeling helpful and I am still waiting on him to get back with me.
     
    Following this, came the lure of the chocolate chip cookie.  After getting out of the house for lunch and expecting the distraction to clear my head, I returned to the delightful smell of warm, just-out-of-oven, chocolate chip cookies.  I'm talking cookies at the exact point in the process where you know the chocolate chips are still warm, and that the cookie can barely be handled without falling apart.
     
    You know how the story ends.  I fell apart.  I forgot about my vow from a few weeks ago to cut back on sugar.  I ate one.  And another.  And then four more.  But, really, who wouldn't have?  Yes, I am being hard on myself but I am on a diet, after all.  A diet that assures me I can have anything I want if I plan for it.  There's the word that a binge hinges on:  plan, or lack thereof.  My binge started at Starbucks and ended at the kitchen counter. 
     
    I can't believe I just spent time writing about the circumstances leading up to my eating six chocolate chip cookies.  Just goes to show the deep psychological workings of my mind. 
     
     
    April 07

    Chicks and Clowns

     
     
    When Denis was a little boy, his Grandma gave him a baby chick for Easter.  The baby chick grew up to be a chicken.  The chicken proceeded to peck the heck out of Denis whenever it came into contact with him.  To this day, Denis has bad memories of that chicken.  If Denis were stuck in a room with a clown holding a chicken, he would probably scream like a girl and die of sheer terror.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    March 17

    Sage Green Shoes Day!

     
    Today is the day for me to wear my sage green shoes!  Yes, I will have them on.  I do not have a lick of Irish in me, but what the heck, I don't want to be pinched.
     
    I will give Bandit and Dingo a greenie for a treat today, so that they too can have the luck of the Irish, though I doubt either of them are Irish. 
     
    Here's an interesting link on St. Patrick driving the snakes out of Ireland.  Can you tell I just figured out the links on my blog? 
     
    I will not drink green beer today because I hate beer.  I may have a glass of red wine.  Oh wait, frozen margaritas are green.  But, I may just have to go with my shoes because I am back on points and cutting down on sugar.  I am ready to get on with the weight loss show.  I've been hovering at the same weight for quite some time because I've been indulging my sweet tooth. 
     
    I have John Tesh to thank for making me think about too much sugar in my diet.  I started listening to the John Tesh show while working from home.  It's good music (except when they play the occassional Lionel Richey) mixed with John dropping in every few songs to give some really healthy, positive tips.  So, put John on the list as one of my co-workers. 
     
    Next weekend, I am going to a two-day seminar with Paula D'Arcy.  I have read two of her books, Gift of the Red Bird and Sacred Threshold, which I will be taking with me for her to sign.  My friend gave me Sacred Threshold when I moved to Louisiana, so it's very special to me. 
     
    Check out my new links to the right.  I've added John Tesh's website and The High Calling of Our Daily Work.  Positive places to visit.
     
     
     
     
    March 12

    Feelings

    Down or glad.  Grieving loss or joyful gain.  Feeling them is prayer.

    Rumi - Guest House

    This being human is a guest house
    Every morning a new arrival.
    A joy, a depression, a meanness,
    some momentary awareness comes
    as an unexpected visitor.
    Welcome and entertain them all!
    Even if they are a crowd of sorrows,
    who violently sweep your house
    empty of its furniture,
    still treat each guest honorably.
    He may be clearing you out for some new delight.
    The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
    meet them at the door laughing,
    and invite them in.
    Be grateful for whoever comes,
    because each has been sent
    as a guide from beyond.

     
     
     
    March 08

    Not Much

    The chiropractic visits seem to be helping my tendon.  I have not had to take any anti-inflammatories for days now, which is good because the pills are ruining my gut.  I try to save them for emergency only.
     
    Yesterday, I had a great day in New Orleans with my friends.  We went to the Anne Frank exhibit, then over to the French Quarter to have lunch and see the Vatican Mosaics at the Old Ursuline Convent.  We ended the day at Cafe Du Monde. 
     
    Lately, I have been enjoying the beautiful weather and going to have lunch outside.  Good food, sunshine, and people-watching. 
     
     
    February 20

    Fat Tuesday

     
    I-HOP is giving away free pancakes today in honor of Fat Tuesday.  I am not preparing for Lent today by eating all the lard in my house.  I've already taken care of that, starting sometime in December 2006.  Nothing like planning ahead.  Today, of all days, is the first day I am back on the wagon in terms of no sugar besides one Weight Watchers dessert now and then, but no more than once a day!
     
    Yesterday, feeling the blahs of routine after returning from my cruise, I went to the gym and then to the mall for retail therapy.  This is the lowdown.  I have bolded areas of restraint:
     
    1. Stopped at food court for chicken nuggets, waffle fries, and diet lemonade.
    2. Had a mint-chocolate chip ice cream cone - one scoop.
    3. Stopped at Godiva and bought a chocolate covered marshmallow and a truffle.
    4. Ate the truffle as I marched off to Dillard's for a jewelry sale.
    5. Came home, ate a Lean Cuisine for dinner.
    6. Ate the marshmallow and the twizzlers left over from the movies the other day.
     
    This is just a sampling of my recent descent into sugarholism.  It is time to admit that I am helpless over sugar and my life has once again become unmanageable.  Needing sugar every 2 hours is an unhealthy preoccupation.  Why can't I be preoccupied with wanting to eat vegetables five times a day?  I'll tell you why, because a Godiva chocolate covered marshmallow tastes a whole hell of a lot better than a carrot stick.
     
    February 14

    Dwight Schrute is my Office Mate

     
    This Valentine's Day, Denis surprised me with my own Dwight Schrute bobblehead for my office from The Office.  My coworkers now consist of:
     
    2 gargoyles from New Orleans;
    2 Canadian moose from, of course, Canada;
    1 Dwight Schrute bobblehead;
    1 artist's model named Bob, who is now jealous of Dwight; and
    2 dogs.
     
    Of course, the moose are not real moose.  The dogs are real dogs.  I still miss real people coworkers.  It's the way I'm wired.  Got back to my desk today after being gone to Mexico on my cruise and no one was there to give me a hard time about being tired and cranky after a week off.  There's just something about people that I like.  Now I am singing Barbra Streisand's "People" song again, can you hear me?  Which reminds me that American Idol is on tonight. 
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    January 31

    Mexico

     
    I am off to Mexico this weekend.  My first cruise.  I am excited.  My sister and I will be shopping and drinking margaritas.  Complete relaxation.
     
    January 19

    The Bathrobe Bed Head Blues

     
    I got up late (again) today for work.  You get away with this when you telecommute as an independent contractor.  Managed to get to the desk at 9 a.m.  My plans were to get to the desk at 7 a.m.  But I stay in the bed every morning.  It's pretty sad because I am up at 6 a.m. to feed the dogs, which should be the chance to propel my way into the day, but I go back to bed!  And it's not a restful time because I feel guilty when I finally get up.
     
    Let me paint the picture for you.  I just worked for two hours in my $16 pink Walmart bathrobe, crocs on my feet.  My hair is a greasy bed head mess.  My face has no makeup.  Amazingly, I was very productive despite appearances, but I don't feel good.  I feel grungy because I'm grungy.
     
    So what is the ideal I am thinking of and, as of yet, not actually striving for?  Up at 6 a.m., feed the dogs, have coffee and breakfast while sitting in the pink bathrobe.  Face washed and dressed in gym clothes by 7 a.m., then sitting at my desk and working for a good two hours. (I think I can stand bed head hair for two hours if I'm at least dressed for working out.)  Off to the gym, shower, eat lunch and back for more time at the desk.  Sounds simple and doable.  Why am I not doing it?  I truly believe it is a telecommuting disaster to work in your pj's.  Not good for the self esteem.  I would not show up in a bathrobe in front of coworkers so why do I rate myself less importantly? 
     
    I've also noticed that my house is a mess lately.  Stuff is everywhere.  According to most spiritual thought, this reflects my inner life.  I believe it.  The thought of organizing it gives me that overwhelmed feeling and yet another reason to procrastinate.  Maybe that's it - I am procrastinating getting dressed in the morning because I am in a general procrastinating funk.  We procrastinate for so many issues.  I have a book on why we procrastinate and how to overcome it.  I haven't read it yet.
     
     
     
     
     
     
    January 17

    Bug on Its Back

     
     
    A bug on its back, wiggling its numerous legs, struggling to get back on its feet, is probably best left on its back.  I flipped the bug over and he seemed wobbly, but started moving forward to go do whatever it is bugs do, hurry over to a fleck of dirt, climb a blade of grass, flip back over again, who knows.  But just as he was making progress, a four legged creature ambled over and put his large, black, wet nose on the bug's back.  Taking two deep sniffs, Bandit decided the bug passed the test and ate him.  At least it was a quicker death than languishing there on the pavement, expending all kinds of energy trying to flip over, only to wind up back on its back and dead anyway. 
     
    This reminded me of the time I was looking out my window in Texas and spotted a beautiful flower popping up out of the muddy brown dirt that was the dreary landscaping of my washed-out backyard.  I started to think of how that flower was a metaphor of beauty's indefatigable effort to emerge in the depths of desolation.  Just as I settled down into the thought, Bandit approached the flower, took two deep sniffs and, yes, you guessed it, ate the flower.
     
    I guess you could say reality bites.