Days that I'm feelin' kinda muffin-ish...and days that I'm not
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Posted by: bobdavie

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Original: 11/6/2008 4:05 PM
Views: 26
Comments: 4
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2 eProps!2 eProps! 2 eProps from:
Suzyqu
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Job38

Thursday, November 06, 2008

something a little more light-hearted...

 a friend who knows me well sent me this...


                    THE BASIC RULES THE CLOTHES LINE
 
 1. You had to  wash the clothes line before hanging any clothes. Walk the length of each line  with a damp cloth around the line.
 
 2. You had to hang the clothes in a  certain order and always hung whites  with whites and hang them first.
 
 3. You never hung a shirt by the shoulders, always by the tail.  What would the neighbors think?

 4. Wash day on a Monday...........never  hang clothes on the weekend or Sunday for heaven's sake!

 5. Hang the sheets  and towels on the outside lines so you could hide your 'unmentionables' in the  middle.

 6. It didn't matter if it was sub zero weather.............clothes would 'freeze dry.'

 7. Always gather the  clothes pins when taking down dry clothes. Clothes pins
 left on the line was  'tacky'.

 8. If you were efficient, you would line the clothes up so that each item  did not need two clothes pins, but shared one of the clothes pins  with the next  washed item.

 9. Clothes off of the line before  dinnertime, neatly folded in the clothes  basket and ready to be ironed.

 10.  IRONED?????????? Well, that's a whole other subject.
 

     A POEM 
 A clothes line was a news forecast
 To neighbors passing  by.
 There were no secrets you could keep
 When clothes were hung to  dry.


 It also was a friendly link
 For neighbors  always knew
 If company had stopped on by
 To spend a night or two. 


 For then you'd see the 'fancy sheets' 
 And towels upon the line;
 You'd see the 'company table  cloths'
 With intricate design.
 The line announced a baby's  birth
 To folks who lived inside
 As brand new infant clothes  were hung
 So carefully with pride.


 The ages of the children could
 So readily be known
 By  watching how the sizes changed
 You'd know how much they'd grown.


 It also told when illness struck,
 As extra  sheets were hung;
 Then nightclothes, and a bathrobe,  too,
 Haphazardly were strung.


 It  said, 'Gone on vacation now'
 When lines hung limp and bare.
 It  told, 'We're back!' when full lines sagged
 With not an inch to spare. 


 New folks in town were scorned upon
 If wash  was dingy gray,
 As neighbors carefully raised their brows,
 And  looked the other way..


 But clotheslines now are  of the past
 For dryers make work less.
 Now what goes on inside a  home
 Is anybody's guess.


 I really  miss that way of life.
 It was a friendly sign
 When neighbors  knew each other best
 By what hung on the line!
 Posted 11/6/2008 4:05 PM - 26 Views - 6 eProps - 4 comments

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4 Comments

Visit Suzyqu's Xanga Site!
This was cute.  Oh, the old days.:)
Posted 11/7/2008 1:56 AM by Suzyqu - reply

Visit purplestar110's Xanga Site!
Awwwww that was cute.
Posted 11/7/2008 8:28 AM by purplestar110 - reply

Visit Job38's Xanga Site!
Actually, line drying was a great way to connect with neighbors when we lived in AZ. It was also a source of shame in a sense, because i didn't take my clothes down as quickly as my neighbor did. Once she and her daughter even joked about me leaving my clothes on the lien too long. (Like a couple of days!!) Yikes, how embarrassing.
Posted 11/22/2008 11:07 PM by Job38 - reply

Visit bobdavie's Xanga Site!
I leave mine on the line overnight (or longer) more often than I would like to admit! LOL.
Posted 11/23/2008 5:33 PM by bobdavie - reply


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