Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Skin-Conditioned: Why You Need It

Winter is basically over. The cold, the road salts splashed up and wear and tear is horrid. So you take your car, which is valuable, to the car wash, get the body buffed and waxed and ready for the punishing sunshine (hoping it reappears!). So that takes care of your baby, your precious possession. 

What about the largest organ of your body? The covering of your closed end system that holds it all together for you? The harsh cold and icy air of Winter can do some damage to your outer layers! Realistically, how many of us ladies religiously shave our legs that are covered by boots, tights or leggings? Now is the time for shorter skirts, platform peep-toe wedges and, thankfully, no stockings or pantyhose! What is it we find? Dry, flaky skin, devoid of moisture. Yearning for a drink of healthy nutrients. 

So here's the thing. I have never liked glopping on a ounces upon ounces of moisturizer. I feel like a slippery eel.  Not a good thing. Even my arms feel dry to the touch. 

Now is the time to nourish your thirsty skin with lots of nutrients. Arbonne Intelligence Genius Booster Serum for Body  , $68, is packed with anti-ageing and hydrating ingredients with omega-3, 6, 7 and 9 fatty acids. Great for getting your limbs super radiant! Use it alone or with our Shea Butter Body Lotion. 

Contact me to get product at up to 80% off. 
ArbonneBeth59@gmail.com
Website: http://BethCohen.arbonne.com  
                                               

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Baseball Begins!

Nothing signals Spring more than the blossoms of Daffodils and Hyacinths, reappearrance of the birds and BASEBALL!  I always loved baseball, ever since a little girl of about 6 or 7.  In those days, I was more than the only child, I was the only girl on either side of my family.  My father lived and breathed baseball from April through (back then) September.  He had a collection of baseball cards that he culled through every weekend if not more often.  At that time, he was really playing a not-yet-discovered game, Fantasy Baseball.  Daddy created his own teams and lineups and had a season games played.  Don't know if he kept stats on that but I would not be surprised as numbers were another love of his life being an accountant by trade.

Speaking of baseball cards, how many of you out there who are my generation or older, have heard the stories of the card collections tossed out in the garbage containing a Ty Cobb or rookie card of then unknown Richie "Whitey" Ashburn?  My dad had one of those!  He gave up collecting until my mom was teaching elementary school and she confiscated some baseball cards from a student and brought them home to Daddy.  That started his collecting Phase II!  Much to her chagrin, a consuming passion was reignited and happily kept Daddy occupied for hours a week, all year 'round!

So, who is this beauty in the photo below?  It is my hsuband Larry's great-niece.  Her mom, Jeanine, is Larry's goddaughter so Hailey is very special to them and to us.  She is sporting her Phils jacket and though she lives in a rival team's backyard, they are all loyal Philadelphia fans on football and especially baseball.  Larry's father, Jeanine's grandfather, was a baseball fanatic too.  He was once considered for a minor league position at one time.  Due to a physical disability with his hands, he could not play professional ball.  Though disappointing, his love for the sport never flagged.  He passed on the love of the game to Jeanine the same as my dad did for me. 

We compared notes one time.  As young girls, we learned how to keep a box score.  We learned the meaning of "Tinkers to Evers to Chance", a classic double-play.  The lineup every year got committed to memory along with the numbers on their jerseys.

My Dad, Larry and his father all remember the old stadium, Sheib Park and later, Connie Mac Stadium and the Philadelphia Athletics when the city sported two professional baseball teams.  As a matter of fact, Larry grew up in North Philadelphia, literally a couple blocks away from the old park.  I remember going up to Cooperstown, NY to the Baseball Hall of Fame.  One of the exhibits was a group of seats from the older and now defunct balparks.  I took a photo for posterity.  Several years before, my father and brother had stopped there to see the Museum.  I can almost imagine him sitting in one of the seats, he and his brother waiting for their chance to sneak down to be nearer the playing field.

I grew up viewing baseball at Veterans Stadium, home of the Phillies and the Eagles.  Now we have Citizens Bank Park.  It is supposed to be more like the way the original parks used to be:  natural grass field, closer to the fans and exclusively for BASEBALL!  Yes, it is a wonderful park.  I cannot help but wonder how my dad would feel about today's players, teams and the ever-lengthening season.  He would still be listening on the radio and watching on TV, keeping box scores, collecting cards and thoroughly enjoying Spring!

This is one ritual we always kept an eye out for on TV.  Now on DVD and in our collection at home, we pop it in right before the first Phillies televised home game!