a thinned-out trail in Eureka Springs
. . . with each throb, he
fretted at the thinning shell. .
. . and the dusk was thinning. . . in thinning out the opposition . . . the extent of the thinning
must depend on the vigor . . . The final
thinning should take place after . . .
the growth intended before thinning . . . slopes fall through
ever-thinning pasture lands to sheer desert . . . attend to the thinning
of spinach, onions, turnips . . . and thinning of fruit . . . thinning
the plants at an early stage . . .the thinning, and topping of the
beets.
Ahead of her was the darkness of a thinning
forest. He opened the envelope and read the note, his lips thinning down
almost to . . . The air cooled appreciably and the ever-thinning
atmosphere caused . . . At the final thinning, they should be set from .
. .
“Thinning” the body with Thin Mint
cookies???? I think not! (Housekeeping 101 site)
Judicious and
timely thinning so as to allow the trees room . . .
My BFF
Dot and I often talk about “thinning” out our domiciles. That means tossing,
recycling (giving away included here), shredding and/ or sharing. Even a fellow writer claimed to be “going through papers (with the intent to
toss as much as possible) . . .” And last year during Lent, I “thinned” daily
and gave to SCJOHN, Saline County’s helping organization. Someone said the
items were picked up quickly.
The two
opening paragraphs are some of what Cortana found when I asked her for
“sentences with ‘thinning’ in them.” It sounds like the word has only one basic
meaning, doesn’t it?
So I must decide, for the sake of my children
and grandchildren, to “thin” my possessions. Where to begin? In my
office is a surfeit of paper used on one side and waiting to be used on the
other side. It’s probably four inches thick. Thin it down to one inch.
Four African violets crammed and jammed into their
pots need thinning. The plant that I’ve already thinned into six parts/ pots
could use a thinning of the longer, outer leaves to give the center leaves more
energy to heal from the surgery.
In the living room, two “crates” of CDs need
new homes. Books bought for future reading that have sat for eight-to-ten years
might need rethinking—and sharing with Friends of the Library.
And how long to keep tax information? Two
sites, both IRS, gave anywhere from three to seven years. OK, I can shred
several years’ worth of those. (But first, I must file this year’s taxes!)
What about cupboards and cabinets and closets
and drawers and open shelves with knick-knacks--some gifts, some ‘fleas’? Can I
toss anything that doesn’t have a pear motif? No, indeed. That would include bluebird
coasters from one sister, ‘sister’ plaques from other sisters.
What I CAN do is quit collecting either blue
glass or pear-motif pieces. Aw, but that’s no fun. Maybe I’ll ‘rethink’
thinning altogether.
Already down to one cat. Now to 'thin the books.'
2 comments:
I hear you. That thinning goal. I don't know that I'll be giving up the blue colbalt. I might just enjoy the thinning in nature. : )
Great photo and blog.
Thinning books is something I find incredibly hard.
And rather a lot of thinning (all sorts barring the lips) is needed here.
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