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November 26, 2009

Chicken Soup Call Outs…

Filed under: Uncategorized — Christa Allan @ 5:54 pm

HOT STUFF! HOT STUFF! HOT STUFF! HOT STUFF! HOT STUFF! www.ChickenSoup.com
Dieting and Fitness: Deadline: January 31, 2010
Christmas and Holidays: Deadline: January 15, 2010
Grieving and Recovery: Deadline: March 31, 2010
Mothers and Daughters: Deadline: December 31, 2009
Grieving and Recovery for Dog Owners: Deadline: March 31, 2010
Grieving and Recovery for Cat Owners: Deadline: March 31, 2010
Grandmothers: Deadline: March 31, 2010
Chicken Soup for the Soul
Runner’s Soul (previously Endurance Sports): Deadline: Nov. 30, 2009
New Moms: Deadline: February 28, 2010
Preteens: Deadline: March 31, 2010
Teens: Deadline: March 31, 2010

Cup of Comfort    www.CupofComfort.com
For Golfers: Deadline: December 15, 2009
Devotional for Moms: Deadline: Feb. 28, 2010
Family Matters: Deadline: Feb. 28, 2010
For Couples: Deadline: April 20, 2010


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Happy Day of Giving Thanks!

Filed under: Moments of Grace — Christa Allan @ 2:30 am


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November 24, 2009

Another reason to be grateful this Thanksgiving

Filed under: Moments of Grace — Christa Allan @ 7:23 am

which sites are blocked in china

from WhatBlocked

Red – Blocked / inaccessible.
Yellow – Partially blocked / unstable.
Green – Available / accessible.


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November 23, 2009

I’m at Random Jottings today. Join us!

Filed under: Writing and Wreading — Tags: Author Interviews, Richard Mabry — Christa Allan @ 2:47 am

Head on over to RANDOM JOTTINGS where my writer-friend and fellow Abingdon author Richard Mabry (of Code Blue) interviewed me.


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November 21, 2009

Just in case you’re wondering what to be thankful for this year. . .

Filed under: Uncategorized — Christa Allan @ 9:50 am

This photo is unsettling.  Kevin Carter took the photo, chased the vulture away, and the girl resumed her way to the food line.  Afterward, Kevin Carter “sat under a tree, lit a cigarette, talked to God, and cried.”


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November 20, 2009

Text-tamonial

Filed under: Random Rumblings — Christa Allan @ 2:27 am

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November 19, 2009

Don’t be the turkey on Thanksgiving

Filed under: Limbs on the Family Tree, Moments of Grace — Tags: Thanksgiving — Christa Allan @ 2:16 am

A week from today, I will have spent fifteen minutes eating a meal that required fifteen hours of preparation, six people to prepare, and a dozen or so serving dishes.

http://www.happyhousewivesclub.com/homemaking/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/count_your_blessings_web.jpgIs it worth it? You betcha. To be surrounded by my family, to celebrate, and to be grateful? Oh, yes. Sometimes,  I simply watch my grown children as they talk to and laugh with one another.  I delight in the generosity of God’s grace that makes it all possible, and for the treasure that those moments are to me. And I am so achingly aware of the rush of time,  the winds of years brushing by me, impossible to stop them. So, I tell my heart to move in slow motion, to capture the smiles, the hugs and the sound of their voices.

This week has been a challenging one for me. In the past few days, I’ve rehearsed saying, “Would you like fries with your order?” and contemplated Wal-Mart blue as a fashion statement. But more about that another time.

For this next week, I am going to make a list of everything for which I am grateful. And I’m going to read it everyday to remind myself that, above all things, I’d have to build an ark to ride out the deluge of gifts God has given me.

What am I grateful for:

  1. family
  2. friends
  3. Saran Wrap
  4. extra-fine point gel pens

Okay, not so profound, but it’s a start. What about you?


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November 15, 2009

Olive Manna designs and Natalie’s book: check them out

Filed under: Moments of Grace, Writing and Wreading — Christa Allan @ 12:38 pm

My web designer, Natalie Joslogo.jpgt, is a remarkable and talented person. In addition to being a wife, a mom of three daughters (one+twins), designing websites, and being tortured by my inane technologically-impaired self, she has an online shop called OLIVE MANNA.  At her shop, you can find textiles and paper goods like gift tags, notes, mini-journals,soft and hardback grown-up journals with Natalie designed covers, bookmarks, bookplates, personalized note pads,  designer plates, stickers, Christmas notes…

And, in time for the holidays, she’s  offering Layaway! Please click on over and browse through her shop. Her fabric designs are lovely and, of course, available!

While you’re there, go to her BLOG and read about her 63-page book entitled Finding My Mother, her story of searching for her birth mother. It’s a compilation plus of blog entries she’s written, and her desire is to reach out to others who are searching as well. What is special about this book is that half of the proceeds from sales of the book and the supplemental journals will be for CASA and similar organizations. This book is also available as a downloadable e-book.

I’ve been following Natalie’s designs for years, even before I ever expected to need/want a website of my own. She’s been  a cheerleader and encourager during my writing, agenting, and selling. My daughter is now a Natalie fan, and I hope you become one as well.


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November 12, 2009

Teachers, Students,Parents: the Perfect Storm

Filed under: ej-oo-key-shuhn — Tags: students, teachers — Christa Allan @ 1:28 am

I haven’t written about school lately, not for lack of topics. Some of the best stories, however, will have to wait until after I retire. In the meantime, most of the latest antics I’ve  composed only in my brain, and then they ghost around in there and never quite materialize onto paper or the blog.

Teachers open the door 2.25" Button

Today, though, a series of events converged into the perfect storm that, without the support of my colleagues, would have left me drowning in a sea of frustration.

The first strike of thunder started with a student complaining about having to watch the Veterans’ Day special program on the morning announcements. In one of my rare “call your kids from the neighbor’s house” voices, I informed him that men and women died so he could whine about sitting in a classroom watching a flat screen television, and I was certain the soldiers’ families would so appreciate knowing how much he honored their contributions.

Announcements over, I returned graded papers. Strike two. A student who submitted an assignment that did not follow the guidelines, was incomplete, and looked as if he’d written it in the back of a pickup truck traveling over a gravel road, had the audacity to “bow up” and yammer about the unfairness of it all.

So, I launched into my “come to Jesus” speech (I don’t refer to it as that to my students; after all, I teach in a public high school). Inevitably, every class, every year requires one of these. Twelve weeks into the school year, the bar’s higher than it was in August, and they’re feeling the pain of chin bruises. Some of them react by stretching, working smarter, and asking for help. Others, usually the members of the “exert minimal effort for maximum gain” club, start fashioning voodoo dolls that are sporting glasses and sensible shoes.

Eight out of twenty-one students in the class submitted the assignment. The others “forgot” (note: each student was given a planner at the beginniEvery Life Writes a Poem Wall Clockng of the school year) because “you didn’t tell us it was due.” One student told me she’s too busy to do homework and, after all, she has six other classes. I reminded her I had 143 other students, and we all have the same twenty-four hours in a day.

Another informed me that I grade too hard. Not a surprise. In fact, just a few days ago, another teacher overheard a student say, “Mrs. Allan grades like a Nazi.” I didn’t know the Nazis had time to grade papers…but, anyway…I’ll own that I have high expectations. I don’t apologize for expecting more of them than they do of themselves because even if they fall short of what I expect, they’re often miles ahead of where they would have been. If they can’t meet some of my expectations–rigorous ones like writing in blue or black ink only, using a heading that includes writing a last name, not Joe T., and writing on the front of the paper–how’s that mindset going to work for them in the real world, with real jobs?

A student remarked, “I’m not going to need a job. I’m gonna be rich.”  To which one of her classmates responded, “You can’t even pass English I, how you gonna get rich?” (I love when kids “get it”!)

Sure, they’re freshmen, and they’re young and silly and hormonal. I get that. But I’m not buying into the, “they’re ONLY freshmen” excuse for why they shouldn’t be held accountable or why they shouldn’t learn to self-advocate.

Nothing disappoints  me more than spending my time reading work that’s obviously completed at the last minute or blatantly disregards guidelines or is woefully incomplete. And, honestly, I feel a wee bit resentful taking time away from my family, my friends, whatever…to spend with half-hearted attempts. When I do sit down to grade, I don’t do it after a fight with my husband, or after opening that month’s bills, or after being awake for twenty-three hours. I give them my best effort. It’s what I believe I should do. But, as I pointed out to them this morning, they expect my best effort, but don’t submit theirs.

The  bell rings and Mr. Bowed-Up walks straight to the principal to complain. No problem because the principal then walks straight to me  to tell me his suggestion to the student was to schedule a conference. (Two years ago at my former school, a parent left messages on an administrator’s phone that she was calling the school board to ask that I be fired.  That apparently didn’t work out for her.)

Second period happens to be my planning period, so I sit to check my school email. Thunderbolt three. I’m not going into too much detail here because this is a yet unresolved issue. I open an email from a parent with whom I already had a conference, and find a l-o-n-g diatribe consisting of biting sarcasm sprinkled with bits of character assassination. In terms of emails I’ve received since that became an accepted communication, I’d say this one ranks in the top five of the most vituperative.  I refuse to even dignify it with a response.

Sometimes it’s difficult for parents to accept that they want academic success more than the kid wants it. And it’s more difficult yet when the parents are working harder than their student because sometimes that leads to  smug kids who thinks parental units will fight their battles. At an Advanced Placement reading two years ago, a college professor told me more and more parents are calling their offices asking for their student’s grades, demanding extra credit be given, wanting grade changes…Of course, the college teachers find all this quite amusing, and refer to them as “helicopter parents” because they’re constantly hovering over their kids.

Ultimately,  it comes down to this: my wise father always told me, “Christa, you can’t push a wet noodle.”

Storm over.


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November 10, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Christa Allan @ 12:32 pm

Jo-Anne Roche Clough Those who love to read, go to either Amazon.com or BAM.com or any book site and type in ‘WALKING ON BROKEN GLASS BY CHRISTA ALLAN”. My dear friend is having her first book released and you can preorder now!!! I was so pleased to see her on all the sites…had to share :) (Hey those who don’t like to read…read it anyway!!)

20 minutes ago


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