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Why SendOutCards?

 One World, One Dream...SendOutCards! photo by Chris Tatro

One World, One Dream...SendOutCards! photo by Chris Tatro

Lately I feel like life is just a whirlwind. In other words, there’s barely enough time to breathe, much less keep in touch with the people I love. The fact is, though, I miss my family so much that talking about ‘em makes me teary-eyed.

You see, folks, I grew up as the oldest of five kids in Memphis, Tennessee, plus there were five first-cousins right across the street. We all rode our bikes to grade school together, went to Sunday Church together, even spent our vacations tent-camping together. Basically we were just one, humongous southern clan of ten kids, two mamas, two daddies and two refrigerators.

Sad to say, though, it’s been thirty-eight years and counting since I moved away from home. All my intentions to stay in touch never panned out. For one reason or another, they just never did—never did untill recently, that is. Are you still with me? ‘Cause this is where the SendOutCards part comes in.

SendOutCards is the most creative and exciting way to stay in touch with loved ones that I’ve ever found. I just wish it had come along sooner is all. Chris uses it more for his business, while I get to make all our relatives feel special and loved. ‘Cause the good thing is, Sendoutcards can do both—help you grow your business and keep you connected to the people that matter most in your life. I actually feel like my life is clicking in the right direction. In plain language, work and play are the same thing these days.

The SendOutCards memory bank is gigantic. It can keep track of as many names, addresses, birthdays, anniversaries as you want, thereby allowing you to send real ‘paper and ink’ greeting cards from your computer with just a click of the mouse. Are you following what I’m saying? ‘Cause I’m now talking about real cards, sealed in real handwritten envelopes, sporting your own handwriting and signature—delivered by the good ole U.S. Postal Service! (Let’s hear it for the mailman and mailwoman!)

But what I truly love about SendoutCards, is how easy it is to create a totally custom card with any picture I choose. And, oh yea, did I mention that I can do this at any time of the day or night?

OK, here goes: Just see yourself lounging on the undulating sands of a tropical Island paradise drinking the juice of fresh mangoes and coconut. What do you see around you?the bluest blues…the greenest greens…the most scintillating colors of flora and fauna every created, all sparkling in the joy of sunlight. Everywhere you look there’s a picture postcard! So go ahead—point your camera and click.

And the fact is, folks, all you need to do is keep on clicking: one click uploads any picture from your computer, another puts it on the front of your greeting-card or postcard, the last little click flies it anywhere in the world. Happy to say, the ‘Great Printer’ in Salt Lake City will print your card, put a real stamp on the envelope, and mail it out for you … all for the price of one dollar and thirty-five cents or less, postage included.

No more driving to the store, no more hunting around for the perfect card, no more searching for your address book/rolodex. And, oh yea, did I mention there’s no need to buy stamps or envelopes?

The first time I heard Chris tell me about SendOutCArds, I couldn’t get a handle on what he was saying. Right away, he lost me. Everything sounded like too much fun to be true. But it is true, foks, and now I send a ton of my own beautiful, custom made cards.

Speaking of sending cards— when was the last time you sent somebody a surprise card—one that wasn’t expected? I probably don’t have to tell you this, but there’s something extra special about that out-of-the-blue card that just shows up in your mailbox. Maybe it triggers a memory from childhood when your favorite Aunt sent you a birthday card with a couple bucks inside. I don’t know exactly how memory works… But if you just stop a second, I’m sure you can remember how it feels to take in the day’s mail and spot a real envelope amidst that pile of junk. Right off the bat you feel the love that can only come from someone who cares about you.

Putting it simply, staying connected is what the SendOutCards Company is all about. Whether you choose to send one of the gazillion cards already in the Great Printer’s memory bank or create your own, the important thing is this: You are letting someone know that you care about them. This happens whether you use the system for business or personal use. Anyone who opens your card will remember you as someone who values him/her enough to send a personal greeting. In this day and age of trashed emails and general disconnect, you will stand out, gain respect and be remembered.

While this system can be used by anyone, many are also taking advantage of the SendOutCards business opportunity. Simply by sharing it with others, you can build yourself a highly profitable home business.

For more information on SendOutCards income opportunities, call Chris Tatro at 530-925-2845 or email him at info@opportunityreviewer.com

Plus, you can try the whole SendOutCards system for free!

Chris has set up some accounts for my readers, so just go to www.thecardprogram.com and click on the banner that says “Send a Free Card”.

Happy Tales,

Laura

p.s. Chris and I are visiting the SendOutCard “Great Printer” in Salt Lake City for the weekend. I’ve got some great pics, but they’ll have to wait ’cause we forgot the cable to download them into the computer.

I Am So Lucky

The 4th of July falls on a Friday this year, which means I’m in luck. Chris buys me a TGIF bouquet of flowers every week at Jamie’s shop in downtown Mount Shasta. For special holidays like the Fourth of July, she makes a trip to the San Francisco Flower Mart to get the wondrous exotic blossoms. Everybody wants flowers from Jamie. Her sense of how colors and shapes fit different personalities is uncanny. Plus, it’s really fun to go in Petals, because, you get to visit with her two-year-old daughter, Sophia—if it’s not nap-time, that is.

Sophia’s her own little character. As soon as she learned to walk, cowgirl boots became the most important thing in her universe. Now, she’s more sophisticated—likes bracelets and necklaces. Plus she’s quite the little expert on commerce. You give Sophia the money which immediately gets passed to mommy, then you get the flowers. Jamie’s daughter often looks like a little flower, herself, sitting amidst the greenery and blossoms. All this early socialization and exposure to beauty will shape her personality in wondrous ways, I imagine.

Beautiful Bouquet Socially skilled people seem to be more positive about life in general and better communicators to boot. In our brave new twenty-first century world, communication is everything, but we have very little time for keeping in touch with friends and family (Hint Hint Hint).

OK. What I’m going to say now is top secret. Chris won’t be able to read the fine print because he refuses to wear his glasses. I’m going to take a picture of the flowers he gave me and have the Great Printer make a card—a Send Out Thank-You Card. Jamie of Petals Flower Shop should have one too. Sophia gets one of herself.

If you don’t want to be left out, I’ll make a sendoutcard using your own personal photo. Just email me one, and I’ll have the beneficent Great Printer in Salt Lake City send it to you as a gift.

Do the Rattlesnake Shake

Yesterday, Chris and I were walking down a dry, overflow rock bed right next to the Shasta River. We were looking for a few good rocks to fill our pathway, but instead we found a long shedded snakeskin! Eureka!

Right away, he got really excited, but the sight of that long thing entwined around the rocks made my stomach queasy. Naturally, I made myself pick it up, just to prove that I’m a sensible female. But to tell the truth, it was really hard for me to touch the sloughed-off skin without cringing. So I just stood there paralyzed, four feet of snakeskin draped over both of my arms. I couldn’t help but think of those weird, serpent-handling Pentecostal folk in the hills of Appalachia.

Why do they do that—drink strychnine and play with poisonous vipers? These are creatures that don’t even like to be in the limelight, much less get man-handled. As I understand it, Pentecostals believe Jesus Christ is inside them handling the serpents, using their hands and brains. Everything I’ve heard about Jesus, though, makes me think that he had better things to do than to play with snakes. Some of the temptation of this religious practice must be the ‘high’ the ‘anointed’ get from drinking rat poison, plus their addiction to endorphins. Let’s face it, snake handlers have got to be flooded with the highest adrenalin counts imaginable.

A Rattlesnake Skin is Still Ferocious LookingGetting back to the snakeskin we found, though: I didn’t know snakes had eyeball coverings. But there they were—intact and clear as could be, like perfect little cups. It was truly amazing to picture how the casings must have pealed off its eyes! When I checked the tail part, a much more unsettling thought popped into my brain— this might be a rattle snake’s sloughing. So I immediately draped the whole thing around Chris’ neck and shoulders, just in case poisonous venom could still get to me in some unfathomable way. Being a curious boy, Chris is definitely more the serpent handling type.

Our next stop was the National Park Service, where this tan, outdoorsy dude told us our treasured snake-sloughing definitely came from a rattler, ‘cause the head was diamond shaped. Plus you could see where the tail part had peeled itself off with a hole instead of a point. Rattlesnakes don’t shed skin from their rattle tails—in fact, that’s how their tails are made. Another rattle adds itself to the stack every time they shed, which can be 3 or 4 times a year depending.

We also learned about the incredible heat sensing pit below and back of the rattler’s nostril that it uses to hone in on warm blooded prey. This sense organ just happens to be more sensitive than our nose and mouth combined. At this point, I was becoming very intrigued about this fine rattlesnake fellow that had left its skin in our path. I mean, when’s the last time humans honed in on some warm blooded prey? And when’s the last time we had to bite it to death in one try?

When a rattler finds its prey, the strike is over in less that 0.5 seconds, and if its targeting is a bit off, it merely repositions both fangs at the speed of light (a slight exaggeration). Unlike the Eastern Diamondback whose venom mostly paralyzes you, the Pacific Rattlesnake’s toxin acts in the bloodstream. If you happen to be one of the relative few thousands that gets bit every year by Rattlers, don’t succumb to the urge to take off running, just because your legs still work. That will only serve to pump the venom through your body faster.

Generally speaking, I’m not a snake person—one of those types who constantly goes out looking, probably because I’d run like crazy. That’s not to say that I don’t admire and appreciate a good snake, especially one that keeps to itself while feasting on bothersome rodents. Our National Forest Service says that one single rattlesnake can cut the rodent population in any given area by 25% per year. Without rattlesnakes, we’d be overrun in no time. I am happy, however, that rattlesnakes are the only poisonous snakes native to California. That’s not saying that some nitwit who keeps exotic pets in captivity won’t accidentally let a King Cobra get away and start a family. But we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.

Speaking of bridges, I think I’ll finish up with a story about my Granddaddy Turner:

One summer’s day in rural Mississippi just a bit south of Memphis, he and my daddy, along with some buddies, were seining a bar-pit next to the Tallahatchie Bridge for some catfish bait (minnows and crawdads). My daddy says a seine is a large fishing net with corks at the top and lead weights at the bottom that you drag through the water. Anyway, Granddaddy Turner happened to have his fingers dangling in the muddy water. They probably resembled a cluster of fat juicy worms, ‘cause all of a sudden he brought his hand straight out of the water like a torpedo with a long snake attached by its teeth to the middle two. That stubborn snake had no intention of letting go. …What in the world was he going to do? Rather than rip-off part of his hand, Granddaddy plunged it back under water till the snake decided that air was more important than a mouthful of worms. Needless to say, everybody could see right away that the snake wasn’t a deadly Watermoccasin, but they were still impressed with Granddaddy Turner’s quick thinking under duress.

There’s a moral here, though……Don’t use your fingers as bait.

A 3 ft+  rattlesnake skinBecause of close encounters like these, my daddy instilled in me a greatly needed respect for snakes. Cottonmouths and copperheads were everywhere in Mississippi, but Daddy said he never saw a Rattler. So I’m having the Great Printer in Salt Lake print up and mail him a SendOutCard with Chris holding the rattlesnake skin next to a yardstick like a trophy fish. That ought to give him a good laugh.

To Get What You Really Want Use SendOutCards

While searching the world of the net I found animal trainer/interspecies communicator, Alan Turner. He even offers this free article—Teach Your Dog to Ring a Bell. Check it out, ya’ll. Kayce Cover was his mentor.

Sadly enough, my last dog moved on to the Happy Hunting Ground about a year ago, but my Gray Fox friend visits every night. Wouldn’t it be fun if he learned how to ring a bell? Better yet, wouldn’t it be fun if we spoke the same language?

We sure speak the same language when it comes to yogurt. Both of us like a good Redwood Hill Farm cup of goat yogurt. Just watching that little, speckled fox-snout root around for the last drop tells me he smells pure ingredients. To add artificial colors and flavors to his delicate system (not to mention refined sugar, growth hormones and GMO’s) would be highly irresponsible. Living in the Wild, a creature needs all his senses.

What does the Gray Fox eat anyway, I wonder?

According to Wikipedia and other sites, the Gray Fox has a broader diet than the more common Red Fox. Because Grays are skilled tree climbers, they eat eggs, birds and squirrels. They also like fruits and veggies. (Wow! Incoming!) Suddenly, this image of a fox eating grapes has popped into my brain!

I found it on the web! It’s Aesop’s Fable! (Number 19):

The Fox and the Grapes

The Fox and the Grapes One hot summer’s day a Fox was strolling through an orchard till he came to a bunch of grapes just ripening on a vine which had been trained over a lofty branch.

“Just the thing to quench my thirst,” quoth he. Drawing back a few paces, he took a run and a jump, and just missed the bunch.

Turning round again with a One, Two, Three, he jumped up, but with no greater success. Again and again, he tried after the tempting morsel, but at last had to give up, and walked away with his nose in the air, saying: “I am sure they are sour.”

The Moral of the Story?

It is easy to despise what you cannot get!

Now there’s some food for thought. I’m not sure how life really works, but I’m pretty dang certain that despising what you really would like to have lessens your chances. Maybe that’s where the saying Sour Grapes comes from. Anyway, I’m sending Alan Turner (howsbentley.com), my mother, nieces, and nephew a Send-Out Card with this cool picture on the cover and Aesop’s Fable #19 inside. (I’ll send you one too, if you email me.)

Goji a Day Keeps Fatigue At Bay


Goji berries have many health benefits, plus they’re sweet! Keep a small stash of these superfruits at your desk. I got this old fashioned tickin’ timer that I set. (I’m windin’ it up right now.) When the buzzer goes off, it’s time to drink some water, stand up, stretch, rip an annoying label off my shirt and have-at my berries. Superpowers, here I come!

The wise Oriental folks have been eating Goji berries, aka wolfberries, for almost two thousand years and ‘they haven’t gotten sick once’ (CSNY lyric reference.) Beautiful, healthy goji berriesThese reddish, raisin-sized dried fruits are believed to boost the immune system, promote clear eyesight and guard the liver, not to mention increase and liven up the sperm. (Don’t want to think about how they figured that one out.) Wikipedia, the free online information capital of the internet, has some interesting info, too; I’m just never sure whose biases I am ingesting.

Speaking of biases, after five hours at my computer reviewing the relative worth of internet marketers, I decided that my little gold bowl of reddish-orange goji berries was too beautiful to ignore. So what did I do? I took a picture and made a Send-Out Card, that’s what. I had my best buddy, the Great Printer in Salt Lake City, print and mail one to an old friend, Barbara (a fellow believer in red and gold together). I can’t wait to hear how she likes it. Send-Out Cards has so changed my life!

Fox On The Rocks

The other day Chris and I were wishing that a fox would come visit us. We were wishing together. Not one of those hard wishes that squeezes your eyes shut; more the quiet kind that travels deep down and makes your insides soft. We knew how lucky, we would be to see a fox. A fox is magic.

But, generally speaking, foxes are shy creatures that go out of their way not to draw attention to themselves. Masters at the art of camouflage, they come and go unnoticed, changing colors with their surroundings. Even their paws are extra furry for quiet passing in the night.

Occasionally, though, foxes go all out to be noticed. They charm their prey into an unguarded state with high leaps, artful jumps and playful rolls, even chasing themselves to look silly. How wily is this? Everything about a fox is aimed at cunning or invisibility, so how would we even see one if it dropped by?

Three nights later, though, we found out. Lying in bed sound asleep, we were both awakened around midnight by a feeling more than a noise. I even had goose-bumps. When brave Chris got up to take a look there was nothing, so we dismissed the vibration as uneventful. Our Fox friendThen it happened again, and I told Chris he ought to check his truck bed. And sure enough, there it was—a little silver and grey fox with red markings, digging its long snout into a small yogurt cup.

Before the magic creature could get away, Chris put his camera together in the dark and got a few good pictures—perfect, perfect, perfect for Send-Out Cards. You have to be amazed at the way that shy fellow looked right up at us while he blended into our river-stone driveway. About the only thing he couldn’t disguise was the light in his eyes.