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Heavenletter #3653-3664
Posted November 26th, 2010 by pinksandgirl
Heavenletters #3653-3664 are proofed. Wow, that was a lot of reading!
Happy Thanksgiving and Blessings to All.
Nancy


HL # 3664 Today, and Today and Today
Dear Gloria,
in the second paragraph of this letter:
“Hello, Today, this day. May you be an umbrella for all the children of God. Open, may your umbrella shield us all from rain. Closed, may your umbrella point the way to God’s heart."
should we read "Opened" instead of "Open"?
Thanks
You could substitute
You could substitute "opened", of course, Normand. But "open" can simply be short for "being open" or "whenever open".
Ok Joch I won't fight with
Ok Joch
I won't fight with the windmill of English "shorts",
À propos shorts. How's your
À propos shorts. How's your Australian early summer? We are having first snow in southern Germany, it's clear and cold, quite beautiful. But a few weeks from now, we will all start dreaming of Agadir, Malaga, Iraklio – some place warmer...
You have "suite dans les
You have "suite dans les idées"!
Indeed we have a very early summer as a spring. Right now it is 19h00 and it is still 32°C. We had 39° last week and it will be 35-36 for the coming four days. I am a little bit worried for the coming real summer in January-February. I hope it won't reach too often 45°. Perth is very dry though. Fortunately the Indian Ocean, down under here, is just cool and refreshing.
While you'll be skiing (soon), I am body surfing on the most beautiful beaches of this planet (the sharks are included!). But the Australian beaches are dangerous. Rip waves and undercurrents are fairly strong. But I don't miss the Canadian winters (even after 5 years).
I have to add that 3 years ago, in a particular hot day in summer, the thermomether reached 60°C on the patio. I photographed the thermometer. It should figure out in the Guiness Book of records.
Wow, the hottest I have ever
Wow, the hottest I have ever experienced was 45° while kayaking the Ardèche. But the really hot thing about this was the whirlwind that abruptly cleared most of the camping ground (my friend and I were spared) and the bolt of lightning that crashed into a tree no more than ten steps away. It was so tumultuous and exciting, we could hardly stop laughing. Well, until we started helping the others whose tents were gone.