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Top Comment:“I clean houses and buildings…alot of people miss behind the toilet and the wall…under the rim the part that has the tank sitting on it…it gets pretty yucky so if you’re wondering why your restroom smells that’s the reason”— Leticia R. Comment
Remove and clean the filter. Remove the filter from the bottom of the dishwasher—if you don’t know where it is, Google your model and pull up the manual to learn how to disassemble it. Soak it in hot, soapy water, then scrub it with a cleaning toothbrush.
Clean the cavity. Next, spray the interior frame of the dishwasher with all-purpose cleaner and allow it to soak. The area underneath the dishwasher door and the door frame can get gunky, so give these areas extra attention. After they’ve soaked for a few minutes, scrub the inner cavity down.
Clean removable parts. Remove the cutlery basket and clean it with hot soapy water and a dish brush.
Use a dishwashing tablet. Finish off by using a cleaning tablet on an empty cycle. Once done, your dishes will come out cleaner and the dishwasher shouldn’t smell anymore.
Debra Johnson, Cleaning Expert for Merry Maids, says there are a few places dust and allergens can hide around your home, including on picture frames and other wall decorations.
“I often find that people forget to dust their homes as frequently as they should,” she says. “I recommend doing a deep dusting in those areas you neglect throughout the rest of the year—especially right before allergy season kicks in.”
It’s a quick and easy task when you follow her tips:
Dust them down. Start by dusting picture frames and other knickknacks on shelves and mantels with a dry microfiber cloth.
Clean the surface. Remove these items from the table or shelf where they normally sit, then use a dry microfiber cloth to dust the surface. You can then put them back into place.
Tackle wall decor. Remove any pictures or decorations from your walls and use a dry microfiber cloth to dust them. Wipe down the area behind each decoration, as well, before hanging it back up.
Your garbage disposal gets rid of unwanted food, but little bits and pieces can get left behind, says Donna Smallin Kuper of Unclutter. If your disposal smells funky, it’s definitely time to deep clean it.
Here’s what Kuper recommends:
Try a quick fix. Put a cup of ice cubes and some salt (to help melt the ice) into your garbage disposal. You can add lemon rind, if you happen to have it—this will give your kitchen a nice, fresh scent. Turn on the disposal and grind until the ice is gone.
Deep clean the appliance. To more thoroughly clean your garbage disposal, add ¼ cup baking soda to drain. Heat up 1 cup of distilled white vinegar in the microwave, then pour it on top of the baking soda. Let it bubble for a few minutes. Flush with hot water.
Don’t forget the flap. “The part of the disposal that rarely gets cleaned is the underside of the flaps that prevent food from flying out,” Kuper says. To be safe while cleaning these flaps, it’s best to unplug your garbage disposal, and remember to never put your hand in the drain. Instead, lift the flaps all the way around so you have access to the underside. Spray generously with all-purpose cleaner. Use a scrubby sponge to remove any grime. Rinse with hot water, then set the flaps back into place.
Becky Rapinchuk, who runs the blog Clean Mama, says people often forget to clean baseboards—the strips of covering that hide the place where wall meets floor. The area is small, but it can collect dirt, dust, and allergens all the same.
Here’s how she proposes cleaning them:
Start by vacuuming. Use a vacuum cleaner with a dusting attachment to go over the edges of your baseboards.
Wash them down. Next, create a mixture of 4 or 5 cups of warm water and a few teaspoons of gentle liquid soap, if safe for your baseboards’ finish. Dunk a microfiber cloth into the soapy water, then wring it out well. Use it to wipe the baseboards, taking care to keep any excess water off the floor or walls. Dry as you go.
Johnson also recommends cleaning both your ceiling and ceiling fan to prevent dust build-up:
Get rid of cobwebs. Use a microfiber cloth or vacuum to remove cobwebs in corners and along the edges of the ceiling.
Clean the fan. Turn the ceiling fan off, and dust along the blades with a microfiber cloth. Remember to get the top, edges, and bottom of the blades, as well as the mount.
Vacuum the room. Chances are you’ll knock some dirt and dust onto the floor during this process, so finish cleaning by vacuuming.
https://food52.com/blog/24019-how-to-deep-clean-guide-missed-spots-home
War With Ourselves, by MwsR
Do you battle anyone who chooses differently than you do?
Is there not anything good that happens to you?
Maybe turn and look real hard at your own self,
Look at the blame you’ve bestowed on everyone else.
Maybe, just maybe, it happened the way it did because of your actions.
Just maybe it was because of your reactions.
The hardest thing can be analyzing
Seeing what’s wrong and start focusing to remove the things that are paralyzing.
Instead of laying blame,
Try to get rid of your own shame.
Nothing can be done until you stop and think
Sometimes things happen in a blink.
Quit talking, gossiping, and stop tearing down
We all have an occasion to wear a frown.
Maybe it’s you, you are the one
Maybe our war is with ourselves, not with someone.




In a land, where gypsies gather,
You can hear screams of laughter, not ones of terror.
All have their humble belongings,
Ordained with the most spectacular displays, each to their own longings.
No one is a stranger, they are just strange together
Settling for whatever
Even when the storms brew overhead
Or whatever kind of weather that may lie ahead
Nothing compels them so much as their sounds of music and rhythm
It would appear that in some way, creates for the, their own prism.
Dutifully they enjoy each other’s talents and ambitions
Each one given their own recognition.
A nice place to stay, a nice place to play,
Only if other communities acted in the same way.
Gypsy land is full of love, full of a jest for life.
You don’t have to be rich or live as someone’s wife.
You just need to contribute, your talent, your spirit
Just don’t fear it!

These Are The Best….by MwsR
Touch is beautiful when it is given
The opening of your eyes , when you start believing.
Smells that make your memories soar,
Waiting to go through the exit door,
Catching the sunbeam, as it shines close by,
Knowing you’re the sparkle in someone’s eye.
Trapping all the best of times
In your mind, before they pass you by.
Feeling the lines in someone’s face,
Knowing in your heart, they’ll never be replaced.
Lying close to the best one in your life,
Has been, since the day you became his wife.
Rubbing your feet with another,
Remembering the things you heard from your mother.
These are the best, yet fleeting times of your days,
It all carries meaning , even what you say.
A Dream Within A Dream by Edgar Allan Poe
Take this kiss upon the brow!
And, in parting from you now,
Thus much let me avow–
You are not wrong, who deem
That my days have been a dream;
Yet if hope has flown away
In a night, or in a day,
In a vision, or in none,
Is it therefore the less gone?
All that we see or seem
Is but a dream within a dream.
I stand amid the roar
Of a surf-tormented shore,
And I hold within my hand
Grains of the golden sand–
How few! yet how they creep
Through my fingers to the deep,
While I weep–while I weep!
O God! can I not grasp
Them with a tighter clasp?
O God! can I not save
One from the pitiless wave?
Is all that we see or seem
But a dream within a dream?
noun [sven-gah-lee, sfen-]
a person who completely dominates another, usually with selfish or sinister motives.
Lou Pearlman, who died on Friday in federal prison in Miami, at the age of sixty-two, was arguably the great pop Svengali of our time. John Seabrook, “We Live in the Pop-Culture World That Lou Pearlman Created,” The New Yorker, August 22, 2016
Though he comes across in his own writings as witty and self-aware, the picture that emerges decades later is of a moody, manipulative Svengali, blinded by his ego to what was really happening on the raft. A. O. Scott, “‘The Raft’ Review: A Crew of 10 Set Adrift With a Moody Svengali,” New York Times, June 6, 2019
Two terms survive from George du Maurier’s novel Trilby (1894). The first is Svengali, the evil musician who hypnotizes, controls, and exploits Trilby O’Ferrall, a young Irish girl, and makes her a great singer who is unable to perform without his help. In the stage version of the novel, the actress who played Trilby wore a sort of soft felt hat with an indented crown, now called a trilby or trilbyhat. The trilby is now commonly mistaken for a different hat, the fedora. Svengali in its extended sense of “a person who completely dominates another, usually with selfish or sinister motives” is recorded by the early 1900s.