Pic by PSD
The key to organization for a great holiday is planning ahead. Whether you plan on inviting people over for an event or traveling to see others, getting a head start is the key. Holidays are usually filled with chaos and disarray on the highway and in the airports, but yours doesn’t have to be. Following these 3 simple steps will help you organize your holiday:
1. Plan months ahead-Somehow the holidays seem to creep up on us, even though they are the same time every year. Funny, isn’t it? However, if you plan months ahead of a holiday you can account for most of the things that may come up to thwart your efforts. One rule of thumb is to start planning for the next holiday the day after the most recent holiday. Most likely you will be looking forward to the next holiday, so it will be easier to plan during that excitement.
2. Designate - Everyone has a person in their family who is good at organizing things and/or a friend that is a super organizer or designer. Don’t be afraid to ask for assistance with the party. If they love organizing and designing they will be more than happy to help you and excited that you noticed their skills.
3. Think outside of the box- It may be visiting a place you have never heard of or eating a non-traditional meal, but doing something most people are not doing can help with organization. It may be more difficult initially to visualize what you want to do, but doing something non-traditional will excite invitees and cause the organizers to focus more on the details.
Organization is a process. Don’t get frustrated if you don’t get everything right the first time. Keep working at it until you get into a groove!
Tags: design, events, friends, happy, organic, organization, organized, overeating, parties, party, s, thanksgiving, travel
Posted in Holidays by Brian | No Comments »
Posted: November 20th, 2009

pic by evelynishere
Potlucks have been around forever, but they are still an effective way to feed a large number of people on a budget. You can be the host and offer your house as the gathering place, but ultimately you want to delegate responsibilities to the attendees. The potluck theme can extend beyond food, if you plan on entertaining people in different ways. You can have each guest bring their favorite CD or movie along with an assigned dish. The CD or movie can pertain to a broader theme for the party. You can make the gathering fun by creating an entertainment theme around the most relevant time period to the prospective guests. For example: ”Thankful for the 80’s” can be a theme that allows guest to reminisce on those times and think about how they got from that time period to today.
The idea behind the potluck is to allow all attendees to participate in making the event a success. If everyone contributes, they will feel like it is their party and won’t feel guilty for not helping in some way, shape, or form. This is an ideal situation, especially during a holiday where the focus is being thankful for what you have and not focusing on what you don’t have. The potluck puts everyone on the same level for that evening, even if some guests are otherwise struggling financially. It is important, especially with the recession still in place, to work together and build each other up. Who knows, your gathering could be just what someone needs and propel them into 2010 with a new attitude about life!
Tags: favorite, food, guests, housing, ideas, party, people, s, thanksgiving, theme, think, time
Posted in Holidays by Brian | No Comments »
Posted: November 19th, 2009
Dear Mom,
Through our many years together I have come to the understanding that Halloween is a holiday that humans like to celebrate. However, I have a few bones to pick with you regarding my treatment during your festive celebrations.
First off, you enjoying baking fabulous treats for you and your guests and yet you are all selfish enough not to share with me. Why? Does my overly practiced cute face no longer have an effect on you?
Second, you begin dressing up and behaving in crazy ways that makes it hard for me to recognize you. And yet I get yelled at for barking. Am I not taught to bark at strangers or weird looking people to keep you safe?
Thirdly, while I understand your guests for these events need to have proper seating, I do not feel that ‘my chair’ is an acceptable place for their behinds. I have sniffed many of butts and can tell you there are very few I want in my space. Please direct them elsewhere for seating options.
And finally, these celebrations are about you and your friends having a good time with one another. I see no point in bringing me into the equation. That means that unnecessary outfits or costumes for me only serve to humiliate me and assist in making me the laughing stock of the entire neighborhood. Would you please cease this useless exercise?
In conclusion, I would like to be righted for all the wrong doings. I will accept five of your home baked treats, unlimited barking rights to those who look funny to me, my chair to be left for ME and of course no costumes/outfits of any kind (unless of course it’s very cold outside and I require a jacket to prevent shaking). Your cooperation on this matter is greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Your son aka Bailey Bear
p.s. Happy Halloween everybody! 
Tags: baking, costumes, festive, festivities, friends, guests, halloween, people, s, treats
Posted in Holidays by Gillian Luce | No Comments »
Posted: October 31st, 2009
Pic by opiummuseum
Do you ever wonder why we celebrate the holidays we celebrate? Do you ever look beyond the festivities, gifts, and laughter to understand the roots of the occasion. Maybe you have and maybe you haven’t, but Halloween has a unique history. History.com says that when Europeans came to America they brought their varied Halloween traditions with them. It wasn’t as prevalent in the rigid protestant north as it was in southern colonies like Maryland. Different European ethnic groups and American Indian traditions meshed to form the American version of Halloween.
The first festivities included “Play Parties” that celebrated harvest and people came together to dance, sing, tell stories about the dead, and tell each other’s fortunes. Telling Ghost stories was common as well. History.com also notes that in the second half of the 19th century America was flood with immigrants especially from Ireland, whom helped popularize Halloween nationally.
The Trick or Treat Tradition came from English and Irish Traditions, and Americans began to go from house to house asking for money or food. In the late 1800s though, there was a movement to take the witchcraft out of Halloween and make the holiday more about community get-togethers and games. Halloween eventually lost its religious and superstitious overtones. Trick or Treating evolved over time to be an inexpensive way for the community to share the celebration. Also, in theory giving kids treats prevented them from being the victim of tricks.
Halloween is now the second biggest commercial Holiday, where Americans an estimated spend 6.9 billion dollars. Knowing the history may just be of trivial consequence, but it will help you understand the dynamics behind such a popular holiday!
Tags: biggest, community, festivities, halloween, history, Holidays, houses, irish, money, overeating, playing, s, treats
Posted in Holidays by Brian | No Comments »
Posted: October 30th, 2009



Houston is the largest city in the state of Texas. NASA Headquarters, the John Space Center, is located in Houston where it was made famous by the slogan , “Houston, we have a problem.”However, there is no problem with Houston’s well-endowed museums that provide wholesome activities for the entire family to enjoy.
The Houston Museum District Association will guide you to and through 18 museums in the Museum District. The museums are complemented by Houston’s skyline, which has been ranked fourth most impressive in the United States. It is the third-tallest skyline in the United States and one of the top 10 in the world.
Noted architects who have contributed to the city are I. M. Pei, César Pelli, and Philip Johnson.
Get more information and search tips on Houston Apartments, or view all Apartments for Rent in Houston,TX.
Tags: apartment, apartments, cities, houston, rent, s, space
Posted in City Guide by Brian | No Comments »
Posted: October 2nd, 2009
If you are a husband or wife trying to convince your spouse to move hundreds of miles from either coast so that you can work at one of 12 Fortune 500 companies in Dallas, or you are living the single life and want a city where you can “Live Large (and) Think Big”, maybe a little preview of the city will help. 
According to Yahoo Travel, Dallas has more “shopping centers per capita than any other major city nationwide and four times more restaurants per person than New York City”. Home to the flagship Neiman Marcus store and 15 Macy’s locations, Dallas should keep the wife/girlfriend happy while the husband/boyfriend enjoys the aura of the Dallas Cowboys.
Galleria Dallas shopping center has been recognized by USA Today as “One of the top 10 places to spend it all”. According to Visit Dallas “Galleria Dallas is the only North Texas home of Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Thomas Pink, Baccarat, Versace, Tourneau, Sony Style, Zara, Karen Millen and the all-new American Girl Boutique and Bistro.”
Shopping and eating until you drop will complement your work in or alongside the Fortune 500 companies in this business Mecca, and the local pristine apartment accommodations add to the experience.
We recommend you start your apartment search here:
Dallas Apartments
The Verandahs Apartments in Dallas, TX
The Elan at BluffView Apartments in Dallas, TX
City Scape Apartments in Dallas, TX
Fox Hills Apartments in Dallas, TX
The Woods Apartments in Dallas, TX
Get more information and search tips on Dallas Apartments, or view all Apartments for Rent in Dallas, TX.
Tags: apartment, apartments, cities, communities, dallas, dallas.forrent.com, macys, s, shopping, texas, travel, youtube
Posted in City Guide by Brian | 1 Comment »
Posted: September 2nd, 2009