brant (brant) v.i. - to simultaneously brag and rant.

brant (brant) n. - a shared on-line journal where people can post brags and rants about themselves and their personal experiences, opinions, observations, and feelings.

branted, brant-ing, brants intr.v. To write entries in, add material to, or maintain a (we)brant.

October 31, 2006

The Blog Moms

Laura’s amazing web guy figured out how to get a photo onto her brant, so scroll down (way way down) to the end of the long gingerbread-house-making piece and see what it looked like when Laura was finished. The only problem is, the photo makes the gingerbread house look short and stocky and pudgy and kind of goofy — completely different from what it looked like in real life which was tall and elegant and truly impressive.

In fact, it was so impressive that when she brought it in to her son’s preschool for Halloween some of the other mothers were kind of, well, jealous, which surprised Laura since several of these women had master’s degrees and Ph.D.s and were quite impressive themselves. This bizarre occurrence — baking something that would incite such jealousy and admiration — jealousy and admiration that her three published novels didn’t seem to incite!!! — became kind of a thing and prompted Laura to write a fake blog to four of her preschool mom friends (in the form of an email a few times a week) about how “great” she was (it was kind of like this brant except it was way more braggy and written in the first person). This in turn lead to Laura and the four fake-blog recipients to refer to themselves as the Blog Moms and it was a very fun year because the Blog Moms were always begging Laura to blog, which she did as much as she could and which gave Laura a huge ego boost when she most needed it (it had been a tough year in the Rejected-Writer department).

Sometimes, when their demands became overwhelming, Laura would call them Blog Hogs but that would just make them want her to blog more, and so she would, but it seemed the more she blogged the more blog they wanted and the supply and demand issue became somewhat of a vicious circle. Needless to say, this was pretty heady stuff for Laura — her three published novels had never created such excitement and desire for more of her writing! — and in time Laura realized that making her fake-blog extra-exclusive would continue to keep demand for her blogging very high. For example, one Blog Mom husband, Billy W., became obsessed with Laura’s fake blog and wanted to be put on the recipient list. This request was overruled (naturally — he was of the wrong gender and Blog Dad just didn’t have the same ring to it). Billy begged so incessantly for blog that he quickly acquired the nickname Billy the Blog Hog which only made him want blog more. He was so desperate, in fact, to be part of the Blog Moms that he offered to blog himself! But Laura turned down that request, too, and only allowed him to be a one-time fake-blog contributor, or, as they’re called in actual journalism, a “stringer.” His assignment: to cover a princess-themed birthday party of the child of a preschool mom who was obsessed with and always talking about scrapbooking. Billy the Blog Hog’s fake-blog was so brilliantly observed and well-written that Laura was tempted to allow him to be an honorary Blog Mom but in the end a vote was taken and the Blog Moms decided against allowing Billy to officially be part of the group.

That was two years ago and even though Laura stopped the fake blog long ago and now has an actual blog and even though their kids are no longer in preschool but are in first grade they still call each other Blog Mom and they probably always will.

Anyway, Laura doesn’t want to obsess or anything, but she’s going to try to upload a better picture of the gingerbread haunted house later today so that the whole Blog Mom phenomenon will make more sense.

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October 30, 2006

Major P.O.V. Confusion

Wow. Laura just read the posting about adding photos to her brant and she was shocked to see that without realizing it she switched from third person to first person and then back to third person during the course of that very short posting. As always, Laura chose not to edit out the strange inconsistencies of voice — she believes strongly in keeping her brant entries immediate and wholly honest no matter how psychologically revealing they may be — and she knows this leaves her open and vulnerable to analysis from every dimestore armchair psychologist out there. As always, Laura welcomes any and all comments — as long as people are writing about her and thinking about her and discussing her to her face, she is always interested in what people have to say.

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Photo coming

For those interested in seeing a photograph of the Haunted Gingerbread Mansion that Laura baked — wait, that’s an understatement — created, built, erected — my amazing web guy is figuring out how to upload photos onto my brant so that soon I will be able to visually enhance any and all postings. As always, Laura thanks you for your patience!

This post was read by 353 people until now.

October 29, 2006

Whole Foods Annoyance #734

Filed under: Laura (All About), Whole Foods, Annoying Things — lzigman @ 6:32 pm

Today while at Whole Foods, Laura passed an outdoor display of pumpkins. Apparently, these were “conventional carving pumpkins” as opposed to just plain regular pumpkins.

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October 28, 2006

My Martha Stewart Halloween

Filed under: Laura (All About), Martha Stewart, Gingerbread House — lzigman @ 11:07 pm

Step I: The Dream

The instant I see Martha Stewart’s Haunted Gingerbread Mansion in the pages of the MARTHA BY MAIL catalogue, something — a longing? temporary insanity? — comes over me:

I want that gingerbread house.

Unfortunately, though, that gingerbread house, as pictured, is not for sale. What is for sale, however, is the Haunted Gingerbread Mansion Project Kit ($32 plus shipping and handling) along with the candies needed to decorate it ($32). I roll my eyes, then take an even closer look at the color photo.

There is no way that I — someone whose first (and last) attempt years ago at knitting a long scarf yielded a small half moon — someone whose first (and last) attempt at sewing a skirt yielded one with the hem attached to the waistband and both pockets sewn shut — someone who has never quite gotten the hang of slice-and-bake cookies or mastered the fundamentals of using frosting from a can — would ever be able to bake, build, and decorate something as elaborate as this.

But the longing persists.

I want that fabulous Edward Gorey-esque mansard Victorian with the mock slate roof (imported licorice disks), bats hanging from the eaves (black royal icing), a warm glow emanating from amber glass windows (interior battery-operated light-source behind hard candy “panes”) on display in the foyer of my Victorian house.

I want to turn the little light on inside of it (wonderfully ambiguous: simultaneously cozy and spooky) and stare at it for hours, then brag to anyone who will listen that I made it myself, with my own two hands, from scratch.

I want to know, finally, the feeling of deep satisfaction that allegedly comes from completing a do-it-yourself project of such magnitude and complexity.

My husband, of course, tries his best to dissuade me.

I don’t have the temperament (patience), he says, or the inclination (natural ability). If I’m feeling such a rush of kitchen-oriented domesticity, maybe I could just cook dinner more than once a month instead.

He does have a point.

I’m certainly not the gingerbread-house-baking type.

Nor do I own a food processor, a standing mixer, or even a rolling pin. Still, I can’t help but wonder:

Could an average (or, in my case, below average) person — a person without access to a professional kitchen and a staff of prep people — complete on of Martha Stewart’s holiday craft projects?

The short answer to that question is yes.

The long answer is a qualified yes:

Yes, an average person can make one of these extravagantly complicated haunted gingerbread mansions if they have the time (33.5 hours over 6 days), and money ($203.85), the patience (13 shopping trips) access to expert emergency assistance (a parent; a highly-trained local Williams-Sonoma sales professional; a general contractor who makes house calls); and the good sense to know when to break down and buy a glue gun.

* * *

Step II: Preparation

From the moment my MARTHA BY MAIL package arrives, I know I am in trouble: there’s almost nothing inside! All the Haunted Gingerbread Mansion Project “kit” contains is a set of reusable plastic templates (like I’d ever do this again) and a 22-page full-color instruction booklet in an oversized Zip-loc bag. I paw frantically through the packing materials and find only the 4-pound package of assorted Haunted Mansion candy, but nothing else. Where is the gingerbread mix? The molds to bake the pieces of the house? Where are all the edible nails and brads and pins — or, failing that, the edible scotch tape and glue — to put the thing together?

Thinking, stupidly, that a quick read through the instruction booklet will calm my fears, a cursory glance at the shopping list alone only makes things worse: Sanding sugar…black and brown paste food coloring…five 13″ x 18″ baking sheets … candy thermometer. I blink wildly. I have never heard of sanding sugar or anything other than liquid food coloring; I only have two baking sheets; and the only heat measuring instruments I own are a meat thermometer and a rectal thermometer.

Step III: Shopping (Preliminary)

It takes almost a week before I feel ready to start my quest for “confections” and “tools” (Martha Stewart’s words, not mine) and when I finally do, I decide not to mess around. This is serious business — a Martha Stewart crafts project, for God’s sake! — a challenge that Williams-Sonoma at the nearby mall seems uniquely qualified to handle (Shopping trip #1). I make a bee-line for the lead sales associate working that Saturday morning and brief her on my situation.

“If you had a commercial kitchen, with all the counter space and baking sheets and oven space you’d need,” she says, flipping through the pages of the instruction booklet, “this project would take you two full days.”

I swallow. “At home? Without all that? What kind of time are we talking about?”

“Uhm, it will take you a lot longer.”

She advises me to bake an extra set of gingerbread house pieces in case they break during the assembling process, then suggests I try a nearby (i.e., cheaper) party store for the specialty baking supplies (Shopping trip #2 [sanding sugar, food coloring, parchment paper]: $11.81). Later that weekend i buy the bulk of the food supplies (Shopping trip #3 [flour, sugar, shortening, molasses, ground cloves, Nabisco Famous Wafers]: $26.57; Shopping trip #4 [ground ginger, ground nutmeg, ground cinnamon]: $10.76; Shopping trip #5 [more molasses; Betty Crocker EZ Flo black frosting]: $8.07). I’m tired, but relieved: had I not ordered all the candy needed to decorate the gingerbread house (black licorice coins; licorice twists; grape-flavored fruit rolls; eucalyptus drops; licorice diamonds) I’m sure I would be shopping for another week at least.

Step IV: Baking

Several more days of obsessive-compulsive list-checking and Art Carney arm-flailing goes by before I get the courage to start baking, but when the time comes, I feel ready. As directed, I mix two batches of gingerbread dough, roll out sections of it onto parchment paper, then lay the plastic templates over the dough and slice out two facade pieces (one front, one back); two tower pieces (one front, one back); two side walls; two door arches; and a bunch of assorted gravestones.

After the first wall of the house is cut, I feel a rush of excitement: my raw gingerbread dough facade looks just like the one in the pictures! But after six hours of rolling, slicing, juggling baking sheets, looking for refrigerator space to chill the sliced dough before putting them in the oven and counter space to cool them when they come out of the oven, my excitement cools. Only seven pages into the instruction booklet — not even one third of the way toward finishing the project — and I’m already exhausted.

Step V: Making the Windows

Since my favorite feature of the mansion is the amber-colored hard-candy windows, I decide to try to get them done before I call it a day. Making them seems easy enough: how hard could it be to melt sugar and water in a pan on the stove until the mixture reaches 320 degrees and turns to a syrupy pourable golden brown? But after one unsuccessful attempt (the mixture stays a clear liquid, then reverts back to dry sugar), I try a second time — another batch of liquidy sugar that doesn’t turn brown which I stupidly decide to pour into the windows. After three hours on the counter and another four hours in the refrigerator, the windows still haven’t hardened (the sugar is supposed to turn into an almost glass-like substance within ten minutes) — I decide to leave the pieces in the refrigerator overnight to see if the windows will harden by morning.

They don’t. Discouraged and despondent, I poke the puddles of sticky goo (think: chilled colorless corn syrup) with various objects (a thumb; a forefinger; a fork tine) and wonder if there’s some sort of chemical fixative (hair spray? nail polish?) that could harden the windows and turn them yellow. In the meantime, I proceed with the delicate process of defenstration (removing the facades and tower pieces and side-walls from their parchment paper; wiping away the glop; then laying them out on fresh parchment paper) and wait for my mother to arrive.

Step VI: Making the Windows (continued)

The third attempt yields another batch which, after the small amount of water evaporates, reverts to dry sugar. At wits end (and almost at the end of my five-pound bag of sugar), I place a frantic call to Williams-Sonoma. This time, an assistant manager takes my call and attempts to talk me down off the ledge.

“As sugar heats up it has different pliability,” he explains. “You have to get the sugar hot enough to reach the ‘hard crack’ stage, without letting it go beyond it.”

I nod, sucking the second-degree sugar burn on the middle finger of my left hand. I have no idea what he’s talking about.

The first form the sugar will reach, he continues, is the ’soft ball’ stage (bubbly); then ’soft crack’ (like Silly Putty); then ‘hard ball’ (very hard); then ‘hard crack’ (hardens like glass). Since I don’t have a candy thermometer (I forgot — and was too cheap — to buy one), he suggests I keep a glass of ice water near the stove and periodically dip a fork into the sugar mixture, then let a droplet form and fall into the ice water.

When batch four remains at the ’soft ball’ stage for a full twenty minutes before reverting yet again into dry sugar, my mother suggests I use yellow colored plastic wrap for the windows instead. After thirteen solid hours of work over the past two days, I’ve had enough with the stringent and impractical edible-ingredients-only rule and authorize the purchase (Shopping trip #6 [”Harvest Orange” Saran Wrap]: $2.79), but later that evening when I spend another two hours trying to adhere the folded and crumpled pieces of orange Saran Wrap to the back of the gingerbread pieces, I am foiled again: nothing — not tape (scotch, masking, electrical), not glue (Super, Elmer’s, rubber cement) — will make it stick.

Out of frustration I eat almost an entire box of Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers (to be used for the “dirt graveyard” in which the mansion will eventually come to rest, assuming I ever finish it) before going to sleep well after midnight. Fifteen hours of intensive kitchen work has produced only the walls of the house; without the windows I’m unable to move forward.

Completely desperate the following morning, I make another trip to Williams-Sonoma. Luckily, the sales associate on duty holds two degrees from Johnson and Wales Cooking School — an Associate’s Degree of Applied Science in Baking and Pastry Arts, and a B.S. in Baking and Pastry Arts — and is thus qualified to troubleshoot my laundry list of problems:

Don’t want to melt another batch of sugar for the windows?

“Get a bag of Jolly Rancher hard candies. Pick out the yellow ones. Smash them and fill the windows with the crushed candy. Bake in 350 degree oven for ten minutes.”

Baked gingerbread pieces don’t have straight edges?

“Get a wood file at the hardward store and gently sand them down.”

Want to try melting just one more batch of sugar but don’t want to ruin a perfectly good All-Clad sauce pot?

“After emptying it, fill the pot with water and boil for five to ten minutes. Repeat until all the sugar is melted away by the boiling water.”

Will royal icing really work as an adhesive for all the haunted house candy decorations?

“I doubt it. Get a glue gun.”

Step VII: More Shopping; More Windows

Feeling like a total loser for my ineptitude but buoyed by the expert tips I’ve received, I spend the next three hours picking up baking and frosting supplies (Shopping trip #7 [more parchment paper; candy thermometer; flour sifter; disposable icing bags and tips]: $37.75); hardware items (Shopping trip #8 [mini Stanley glue gun; glue cartridges; wood file]; $17.19); and replenishing stapes (Shopping trip #9 [another five-pound bag of sugar; another one-pound box of confectioner’s sugar]: $2.79), then return home re-committed to melting one last batch of sugar for the windows.

The fifth time proves to be the charm. Holding my new candy thermometer against the inside of the pot (thereby acquiring another burn on the same middle finger), I push the mixture past the dry-sugar stage toward the 320 degree mark and suddenly notice a rich amber color in the pan: The granules are melting! Liquefying! After transferring the syrup sugar into a Pyrex measuring cup, I pour it into my windows and watch, transfixed, as they harden in seconds. Teary-eyed with gratitude and fatigue (and pain from yet another finger burn), I’m tempted to drive back to Williams-Sonoma and tell them all the good news. But there isn’t time.

Step VIII: Construction

The following morning, still aglow from the previous day’s hard-won window-making victory, I am now more nervous than ever about beginning the actual construction: I have more to lose. What if I break one of the facades or chip one of the chimneys off the sanded-sugared tower pieces? What if, in my haste to paste (I’ve decided to forgo making a sixth batch of melted sugar for gluing the pieces together an opt instead — guiltlessly — to go with the glue gun), I connect the pieces incorrectly? Knowing my husband is not up to the task either (he is, after all, the one who put a crib, a changing table, and two sets of bookshelves together backwards), I realize it is now time to call in another professional.

I contact a general contractor (a friend of a friend) who agrees to come and help with this phase of the project. Standing in my kitchen, he assesses the situation (a nervous “homeowner”; a “construction site in progress”; a “punch list” of things yet to be done), then quickly and carefully familiarizes himself with the mansion’s instruction booklet and the mini glue gun’s instruction booklet. Explaining that he’s going to use the glue gun like a caulking gun because the edges of the gingerbread pieces are uneven (he advised against sanding them down with the wood file out of fear of “compromising the integrity of the walls”), he squeezes a thick layer of hot glue onto the edge of the front facade and connects it to the left side wall.

I close my eyes, hold my breath, then peek out from the corner of my left eye. Nothing broken. He glues the other side wall to the front facade, then glues the back facade and the two roof pieces on. Carefully inspecting the “ballooning” structure (when a building holds itself up by its exterior walls and roof), he notices that the two horizontal roof pieces are bowing slightly. He also notices that the roof is properly equipped with “ridge vents” (an overhang between the walls and roof for ventilation and fire-stopping purposes) and announces happily that the structure has been designed and built “almost to code.”

With the major construction phase now completed, I ask him to look at the remaining building plans from the color photos in the instruction booklet. While he is impressed by the realistic look of the layered rows of licorice-disks on the roof, he points out that it does not incorporate the proper “flashing” (a layer of copper right under the first row of slate or shingles that protects the overhang of the roof in most New England homes). In addition, the shutters appear to be bigger than the windows themselves which would make them uncloseable and thus non-functional to protect against typically harsh New England weather (my drafty foyer).

Had we the time — and money — we could have installed gutters, but after some quick “job costing” my contractor advises me to “scale back” on the “scope of the project” and focus only on essential materials necessary for the structure’s completion (Shopping trip #10 [confectioner’s sugar; two packages sun flower seeds in their shell]: $2.19; Shopping trip #11 [more Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers]: $7.80; Shopping trip #12 [back-up eggs and confectioner’s sugar]: $2.69).

Step IX: Decoration

It’s hard to believe that after almost twenty-seven hours of work over five days my gingerbread mansion still isn’t finished, but instead of being frustrated and angry (like a normal person), I’m ebullient. Just staring at the naked ballooning structure with its transluscent amber windows fills me with a profound sense of accomplishment. The finish line is in sight now, and I’m dying to cross it.

But I have to clear one more potentially disastrous hurdle: making the royal icing (the Betty Crocker black spray icing I’d bought as a potential time-saving substitute proved useless since it doesn’t harden when it dries). And while I had fully intended to use the glue gun during this phase too, I decide suddenly to return to the original goal of complete edibility. Beating the confectioner’s sugar and egg whites for almost twenty minutes on low speed to pump as much air into the frosting as possible (to ensure it will harden properly), I then start adding black food coloring.

But after using more than half of the little vial of black “gel” food coloring, the frosting is only a light gray. I add a little more. Slate gray. I add the rest of it. Gun metal gray. Completely annoyed, and, this late in the game, completely unwilling to jump in the car for yet another shopping trip, I decide to settle for this decidely non-black frosting and press on (literally and figuratively). Four hours later, I successfully complete the intricate final stage of decoration — the royal icing has hardened, as promised, like cement to hold the licorice disks to the roof, the sunflower seeds to the doorway arches, and the grape-flavored fruit roll-up shutters to the windows (it has also dried to a deep black). With the Nabisco Famous Wafer-cookie crumb dirt graveyard (minus the frosted headstones and royal icing bats and bones: I mean, life’s too short) sprinkled around the base of the mansion and the licorice-heavy roof looking like it could cave in at any moment, my haunted house is finally finished.

Well, almost finished (Shopping trip #13 [small string of Christmas lights for interior light source]: $1.49).

Epilogue

My 33.5 hour tally includes the time I spent shopping, baking, decorating, scrubbing pots and pans, applying Neosporin to injured fingers, eating Nabisco Famous Wafers in frustration, and searching Martha Stewart on-line bulletin boards for people who have actually made the Halloween gingerbread mansion before and lived to tell the tale (not many).

It does not include the time I spent paralyzed by fear, anxiety, and annoyance during the construction phase (hours), or the time I spent gloating after the construction phase (hours and hours).

In case you’re wondering what my plans are in the wake of such a sucess, I’ll lay them out here:

First, I will invite everyone I know over to see my magnificient accomplishment (deeply jealous, they will almost certainly grow to hate me).

Next, I will begin my search for a fixative spray to preserve my gingerbread house (I plan on keeping it, like Mrs. Havisham’s wedding cake, for a very long time).

Finally, I will place my order for the MARTHA BY MAIL Christmas Gingerbread House Kit (templates and instructions for four structures [log cabin; Colonial farmhouse; chicken coop; enchanted castle]: $68).

December, after all, is just around the corner.

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[Benji in costume, October 2004]

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Laura’s Patron Braint

(Laura wishes that Wendy H. — the managing editor, copyeditor, proofreader, and all around bradvisor — were awake now to instantaneously provide Laura with feedback about typos, content-problems, and any inadvertent and accidental references or links to swingers or swinging. But considering the fact that it’s almost 1:45 a.m. — even with the extra hour to be gained after turning the clocks back in fifteen minutes — Laura understands that Wendy H. is, like most normal non-branters, sleeping now. However, Laura would like to request that as soon as Wendy H. is awake and functioning she get her corrections and comments emailed to Laura post haste.)

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The Long Version

Laura promised, at the end of the summer (or at the beginning of the fall), that she would for Halloween post a piece she wrote two years ago (or was it three? Laura can’t remember. Laura can’t remember anything these days) for the New York Times about trying to make one of the incredibly complicated craft projects in Martha Stewart’s now defunct catalogue, MARTHA BY MAIL. Laura’s not ashamed to admit that she used to love that catalogue and purchased many truly excellent items from it and misses it to this day. But that is life, Laura knows. Here today; gone tomorrow. Which is true, but which is also neither here nor there.

Bad cliches notwithstanding, because the Haunted Gingerbread Mansion project took so long to build, the piece she ended up writing was way too long to run in it’s entirety in the Styles section, so it was, the following year, run on the Op-Ed page in an extremely abbreviated version. Laura always liked The Long Version of the piece much better since she felt that it really conveyed the hellish real-time feeling she experienced while in the thick of the project.

And so, here it is.*

Laura hopes you like it.**

And Laura also hopes you have a great Halloween.

(*Because it was written for the New York Times, Laura maintained a tone of journalistic integrity. Had she not written it for the New York Times, there would have been a lot of swearing.)

(**If you get bored, you don’t have to read the whole thing. Just skip ahead. But please don’t leave a comment that you got bored and skipped ahead.)

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October 25, 2006

The Braint

Filed under: Laura (All About), Branting, Wendy H., Braint (Brant+Patron Saint) — lzigman @ 8:44 pm

Laura just came up with a word for what Wendy H. is: a braint (brant + saint = braint).

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Saved!

Laura wants to thank her good friend Wendy H. (another modest person, this one, who doesn’t want to call attention to herself) for

a) reading her brant religiously;

b) teaching her (or trying to teach her since Laura never actually figured out how to do it without Wendy H. standing right there next to her telling her what to do at every step) how to use the check-out scanner aparatus at the Williams School library where both of them volunteered last year during their sons’ weekly Kindergarten visitation;

c) catching a major glitch in one of her posts tonight: the link to Laura’s sister-in-law’s- radio show “The Good Stuff” which she’d just added to her blogroll.

“The Good Stuff” is on the Lifestyle Talk Radio Network, and Laura mistakenly entered the website address as “www.lifestyletalk.com” instead of “www.lifestyletalkradio.com.” Unfortunately, “www.lifestyletalk.com” is a WEBSITE FOR SWINGERS which Laura certainly wasn’t intending to link to.

(Not that there’s anything wrong with that).

(But for the record, Laura thinks swingers are kind of gross.)

(Again, not that there’s anything wrong with swinging.)

(But Laura feels a need to express her rather strong opinion and clarify her position on the matter.)

(Just in case people think her “mistake” was a cry for help — OR a sneaky way to find other swingers to swing with.)

(But all joking aside, Laura wants to make it VERY CLEAR that she and her husband DO NOT SWING, HAVE NEVER SWUNG, AND DON’T INTEND TO SWING IN THE FUTURE.)

(Again, not that there’s anything wrong with that.)

Her (negative) opinion of swinging notwithstanding, Laura is hugely grateful to Wendy H. for catching the embarrassing (but neither intentional nor sub-conscious de-lidding of her id) mistake within minutes after it was posted.

Every branter should have a Wendy H.!

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A Scary Thought

Filed under: Laura (All About), Branting — lzigman @ 6:23 pm

Laura just got such a rush from plugging her friend’s website — the power of branting about people and things and sites she loves and wants everyone else to love is intoxicating! – that she’s afraid she’s going to get addicted to adding to her blogroll. That doesn’t mean she’s going to stop adding to her blogroll. It just means that she’s worried about the power branting has over her.

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