Tuesday, December 25, 2012

merry christmas!!!

merry christmas peeps!!!!!! guess what! i sm making this post on my new nook that i got today!!!!! alright,i gotta go play with my orbeez and tarot card$

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Chappy Chanukah!

Jewish peeps, i'm sure you get the joke!! :) But if your a Christan peep, in hebrew, (a jewish language) chanukah is pronounced with a deep noise in your throat, and ch is the closet english letter combination t it so that's how you spell chanukah. (Although you can also spell it hanukah, chanuka, hannuka, etc.) And happy is spelled happy, but i changed it to CHappy!




Well, Also... Cherry (almost) Christmas!


Cheers, yo, bye,


Madam

Thursday, November 29, 2012

I HAVE A NEW AWESOME BLOG!!!

HI PEEPS! I HAVE A NEW BLOG!!!! IT'S A WRITING BLOG WHERE YOU CAN SUBMIT STUFF1 CHECK IT OUT!!! NOW!!!! IT'S : writingwithyoursoul.blogspot.com     OR YOU CAN JUST CLICK ON ME, (madam golden-frich of iluvpickles land) un Contributors ON THE RIGHT IF THE BLOG ADDRESS DOESN'T WORK!! VISIT IT!!!

PLEASE COMMENT (AGAIN!)

Un-Nutty Buddy!

Today, our new jack russel terrier, Poco, got porcupine quills in his cheek! Boo hoo. :( But, he will get better! PS: FINALLY I have firguered out a way to transfer my stories to this computer that has internet! Guess how? TYPE TH EWHOLE STORY AGAIN! Ugh! Well, yesterday i spent an hour re-typing this excerpt from a story i've been righting for a LONG time! I will post more of it later:





                            GEORGE
The day George arrived, it was raining. The day George arrived, Mama was chattering with her fiancé, Robby, who smells like dirty socks and draws people with peanut-ears. The day George arrived, Sally and Joe were playing in the neighborhood lot. The day George arrived, I was the only one alert. I was the only one swinging on the old wooden swing on our front porch, stroking Ralph, our mutt, and waiting for something miraculous to happen. That old swing was not rightfully ours, since it was a rental just like the house.
            “Just gotta wait for miracles during The Hard Times.” Mama always said before she tucked me in my stiff, tiny bed and blew out the candles.
            Mama never use the real word for this time, The Depression.
            The day George arrived, I was reading my new Annie comic that Penny let me borrow. It had a few scratches and rips, but I could still read it. Every Wednesday, Penny and I would trade our Annie comics and read them as fast as we could, getting to the good part.
            “And then, Annie saw to her dismay, Sandy had a broken paw! Oh what would she do?” I read, reading as fast as I could, wanting to find out what happened to the poor dog.
            I loved the Annie comics since my name was Annie, too and I always felt like I was the one going on adventures and getting adopted by millionaires.
            “Annie! Come back in here, or you’ll catch a cold!” Mama yelled from inside.
            “But I like the rain!” I yelled back.
            I settled back into my favorite spot on the swing, chewing my hair and reading excitedly.
            “And then, Sandy started sniffing the ground. Could it be the culprit?” I read aloud.
            All of the sudden, I heard bike tires sloshing in the muddy puddles.
            “Probably just the mailman.” I said, holding out my hand to catch the newspaper.
            I heard the tires get closer and…THUMP!
            “That didn’t sound like the news,” I said, bunny-earring the page and bending to look down.
            I gasped; I was right, it wasn’t the mail.
            “Mama!” I screamed.
            “What is it?!” She yelled back, slamming down the phone and wiping her sweaty forehead.
            She opened the door and looked down.
            “Huh!” She gasped, gaping at the sight in front of her. “Get the twins!”
            I ran down the muddy street with Ralph right behind my heels, barely missing muddy puddles.  Droplets of mud fell on my face, staining it with polka dots.
            I jumped over the wooden fence, breathing very hard.
            I ran across the lot, grabbed the seven-year-old twins and pulled them towards home.
            “What is it?” Sally asked, pulling away. Joe would have asked too, but ever since Papa died, he’s been silent.
            But all I could get out was: “Stray…cat.”
            Sally and Joe looked at each other, silently decided, and followed me over the fence and down the street.
            When we got home, Robby was already there. His red hair looked tangled and his pale, freckly face had a look of awe on it.
            “Kitty!” Sally yelled, and she was right.
            In the small, ripped cardboard box lay a thin, dirty, scruffy, helpless little brown and black kitten. It’s eyes were closed, and it’s lashes were big and black. It’s tail was short and fat. It was so thin, you could wrap your fist around it and have your fingers touching.
            That was George.   














Sooooo...... please tell me what you think about it since i may be publishing it in a magazine. Cheerio and happy almost-December!!!