Every Part of the Rainbow is Fine
A rainbow is used as a metaphor in this Convenience.Scholars generally accept that the Convenience writer and scholar named Anna created this statement. She was writing during the early twentieth century. (She is first mentioned here).Anna was part of an early twentieth-century convenience movement to be more inclusive.The movement encouraged the belief that all benevolent dreams [emphasis mine] were part of the spectrum of possibility and should be encouraged.
In our experience,
every part of the rainbow is so fine.
The day is washed by rains, dried by the sun's heat,
and is especially favored.
It is a joy to the eye.

Some Missouri Convenience History
Here is the first example of a convenience specifically describing a piece of regional history.The text of the writing indicates that healing can sometimes, at first, feel like more trauma.The writing also indicates that this discernment can be difficult for practitioners as well.The process may, in fact, appear to be an inconvenience, but the results will reassure the seeker that this is not so.
Missouri Convenience History
Even newcomers with knowledge and experience found the learning process steep.
The beautiful convenience was simple.
The convenience designed to repair damage sometimes appeared to be an inconvenience

Reminiscences in another County
Convenience scholars believe that this convenience was written by a man who had been a soldier, or by a woman very familiar with a soldier, perhaps a wife, sweetheart, sister, or mother.Note the publication date of the original source, Baily's Magazine of Sports and Pastimes. (1897).The first sentence of the convenience references five-and-thirty years ago, which tells us that the convenience is referencing a time roughly located in the early 1860s.The language of the convenience is formal and hierarchical which does not necessarily place it within a military milieu as much of the 18th century experience was hierarchical.The style of the convenience does place it within a military context.Note that the extraneous text is not struck-through and references officers, exercises, Wellington, Napoleon, etc.Many scholars debate the reasons for leaving the extraneous text; here are some of their questions:
- Was the writer so busy he or she did not have time to strike through the text?
- Was the reader so confident that he or she did not see the need to strike through the text?
- Was the writer unfamiliar with the convenience tradition of striking through? This may indicate that the writer is new to the conveniences.
- Was the convenience dictated from a soldier to another person, one who may not have been familiar with the traditions?
In any case, the convenience certainly appeals to those who are comforted by authority and precision.
Reminiscences in Another County
They were soldiers
Five-and-thirty years ago the graduates were ambitious and not afraid of work
Memoir presents a memory:
those who were at the top of the tree of truth made up the nucleus around which trading was formed.
Their motto was serving hope with distinction

A New Year's Preface
This convenience writer considers some of her life experiences; she then describes some intentions for a new year.The original page for this convenience comes from The Theory of Color in its Relation to Art and Art-industry by Wilhelm von Bezold, 1876.Convenience scholars suggest that this writer is an older woman because of the depth of the introspection and the date of the source page.Note the use of color on a source page written about color theory. Also note the yearned-for experiences, the width and depth of their hunger, and how they metaphorically interact with the concept of color.This writer was quite prolific, and her images appear again and again across the convenience landscape.Convenience scholars have adopted the convention of calling her Anna.
A New Year's Preface
Though the author attempts to not conceal herself from herself,
the fact is that mysteries & tangled paths abound
especially among memory, distress, comfort, & release
&
it is principally intended that in this New Year
the most glorious creations are seen and heard & smelt & touched & thought and felt & imagined
and made
by continued practice & play and care & curiosity

Deadly Sin Inconvenience - Lust
The upside-down hearts tell the reader that this is an inconvenience. Its topic, lust, reveals it to be from one of the inconvenience writers focusing on the seven deadly sins.This particular inconvenience has been extensively studied by convenience scholars because of its implications.Convenience scholarship has never shown itself to be particularly prudish or unaccepting of different manifestations of physical desire.Most scholars support the passion of these words and phrases: impatient, no shame, and very natural performance.The problematic issue, to many convenience scholars, is the use of the word demanding, and the comment that it seems wrong to cut physical desire off ever.They consider the words demanding and ever to be too broad, to be potentially abusive (to the self and to others), and to be misleading.
License Lust
Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!
An impatient desire for the natural clasp which blooms
No shame
Be demanding
It is a very natural performance
It seems wrong to cut it off EVER
Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!

Seeing Dreams With a Clear Eye
This Convenience Commentary writer advocates leaving aside too many old beliefs (superstition) and too many expectations (reverence).The writer is from the convenience tradition that privileges the current moment as the only sure source for dream validity.She adheres to one of that tradition's primary tenets: the theory that a selectively-remembered past, and an imagined future (both impossible to avoid), present us with counterfeited impressions of possibility.
Seeing Dreams with a Clear Eye
I believe counterfeiting dreams hath done mischief.
I fear reverence and superstition to be a narrow compass.
The results of this combination are injurious.

Commercial Convenience 3 - An Invigorating Dream Beverage
This dream advertisement appears to have been created around the turn of the 20th century.Convenience scholars have estimated this date based on the composition and the content of the ad.The style of the advertising copy matches the early-twentieth century advertising style.The boxed dream product tells scholars that the ad creator was living near the end of the industrial revolution when commercial food and drink packaging was in full development.
An Invigorating Dream Beverage
—a real part of the solution, not merely something to drink with hope—
Diversi-Tea
If you feel stuck
There's a reason
If something interferes with your dreams,
use this powerful drink.

Deadly Sin Inconvenience - Sloth
Here, again, are the upside-down hearts used by this familiar Inconvenience writer.She discusses sloth in this piece, and the contents are straightforward and clear.Convenience scholars do read an important piece of evidence for discerning this writer's identity.She uses images related to gardening, which tells readers that she is familiar with the agricultural calendar.At some point in the writer's life, she has been exposed to at least one growing season in the natural world.
Deadly Sin Inconvenience - Sloth
Fully convince that work is evil
Do not try it
Do not plant
Do not hoe
Do not harvest
All is unnecessary

Homestead Convenience 37 - Break Down the Self
The writer of this homestead convenience advocates deconstruction, and the phrase break down is used as both a verb and a noun.When break down is experienced as a noun, the writer recognizes that a seeming break down may actually be a creative experience, and/or an experience full of grace.
Convenience scholars have parsed this passage and have noted that the phrase break down may denote any life experience that causes (or is caused by) stress, depression, anxiety, trauma, etc.
The scholars do NOT attempt to trivialize the physiological causes of a break down, and they do recognize professional help (if required) as contributors to insight and transformation.
When used as a verb, the convenience writer suggests that breaking down habitual ways of thinking, feeling, or behaving is useful. Breaking down is deliberate in this case.Please note that the writer speaks of necessary repairs. She advocates repair, which scholars take to mean a reassembling of thinking, feeling, and behavior.She advocates transformation.
Farm Convenience 37 - Break Down the Self
to break down one's self is to lighten experience
provided the necessary repairs render
Insight and Transformation

Deadly Sin Inconvenience - Envy
Note the upside-down hearts at the top of the left and right margins that mark this text as an Inconvenience.This Inconvenience writer emphasizes secrecy, dissatisfaction, and discontent.The writer also comments on the infectious aspect of envy, and notes that it can be encouraged by falsehoods.
Establish Envy
The seeds of this are born in secret and should be extensively cultivated.
First attempt to sow the seed in bulk.
If the seedlings do not grow and satisfy, reach for a dissatisfied friend.
Discontent may be transferred from one to the other
Water with misleading statements.

Homestead Convenience 31 - Transmutation
Some practitioners favor the idea and act of transmutation, rather than replacement.This convenience writer believes that the energy in old, or no-longer-useful, beliefs or dreams can be changed into a new kind of experience.Please note that the writer advocates NOT beginning the transmutation until all other attempts and all other avenues have proven fruitless.This writer believes the fruitlessness to be natural and inevitable.The writer's comments about coming to the laborious tells clients that there is work to be done.The end of the tether does not mean immediate peace, but it can mean the first step in healing.
Farm Convenience 31
Transmutation
Come to the inevitable, to the natural, to the laborious.
Reach the end of the tether and
undertake sufficient care that no particle be lost.

Direct and Clear Light Convenience
This convenience writer makes bold statements about the important of her practice. She was a prolific convenience writer, practicing in the St. Louis area between 1830 and 1894.Convenience scholars have remarked on the distinctive craft, style, and tone of her work, also noting the nineteenth-century images of St. Louis that are always included.
Direct and Clear Light Convenience
I have written this by a direct and clear light.
I writing feeling and its descriptive quality.
I work and write wonders.

Deadly Sin Inconvenience - Gluttony
Here is another deadly sin inconvenience, marked with an upside-down heart at the top of both the left and right margins.Somewhat curiously, there are fewer academic analyses of this inconvenience.Some convenience scholars have believed this is because there is no real need for analysis.They believe that the inconvenience itself more than adequately expresses its intent and its distress.
Grow Gluttony
Never a little bit.
Many, many, many more.
Never enough.
Much, much, much more.
To our sorrow.
Forever.

Anytime Convenience 33 - Interested and Curious People
This convenience writer encourages curiosity as a remedy for depression.She maintains that interests can woo the mind from dark and brooding thoughts, that curiosity can pull focus away from the troubled self.
Anytime Convenience 33
From time unknown
the secret of feeling independent of gloom
is found in interested and curious people.

Anytime Convenience 63 - Restrain Unpleasant Barbs
This Anytime Convenience writer recommends moderating discourse.She suggests that refraining from unpleasant speech is an act which contributes to serenity.But serenity for whom?Most convenience scholars propose that the idea of harmful speech being injurious to others is implicit in this convenience.The same scholars also agree with the Convenience spiritual community that this writer primarily focuses on the speaker's agency and the consequences of the agency for the speaker [emphasis mine].
Anytime Convenience 63
Restrain from unpleasant barbs.
This modification is necessary for
the peace of the soul
and
the happiness of the heart.

Homestead Convenience 12 - Cut While the Sap is Dormant
Unlike the inconveniences, which often encourage action while experiencing the problematic emotions of anger, pride, lust, gluttony, etc., this convenience encourages working with serenity.The convenience writer advises allowing the emotions to settle and become dormant, suggesting that tranquility leads to a more effective treatment.
Homestead Convenience 12 - Cut While the Sap is Dormant
Cut while the sap is dormant
to strengthen the side

Deadly Sin Inconvenience About Anger
This is another Inconvenience based on one of the seven deadly sins: anger.Inconvenience practitioners recognize how much resentment and anger can affect the behavior of clients, often driving them into the very the behavior the inconvenience community desires.The writer notes the universality of human anger by commenting that both the sensitive and the insensitive personalities can succumb to it.The word manure is used as a socially-delicate comment on the quality of the encouragement required to stoke the fires of rage. The images of the gardening tools emphasizes the necessity of this manure.Note the upside-down hearts that signify inconvenience.
Animate Anger
Tender skins may work best on anger,
although tough skins are not too difficult either.
Plant impatience and resentment,
mulch with manure and harvest

Grace Convenience 68 - Light and Heat
Grace convenience 68 is both a warning and a path of recovery.It tells the reader that ignoring ideas and the imagination is dangerous, because ideas will lose their energy.Sincerity and grace can offer redemption and healing to the imagination via sincerity and grace.The convenience is a warning against wasting time and dismissing creative gifts, but it also offers the solace that creativity is never absolutely and finally extinguished.
Grace Convenience 68
Restoring Light and Heat
If the imagination be left unattended, the lustre of an idea will be destroyed
and then the dream can only be recovered by sincerity and grace

Homestead Convenience 116 - Connecting Dreams
The writer of this convenience appears to have been mechanically-minded, and provides readers with explicit visual cues.This convenience is a good reminder that it is not always necessary to completely discard old dreams.New dreams can be infused with the images and energy of old dreams, and can be grown from their compost.
Connecting Dreams
When it is desired to connect a new dream with an old one,
without loss of energy,
it can be done as shown in figure 142.
Extend the inside of the new dream to the outside of the old one,
and, when ready,
pump the ideas from the old to the new dream
and the new dream will float to the top.

Convenience Ad - Eclipse Dream Remover
Here is another dream advertisement. I'm going to go ahead and categorize it as both an advertisement and a renegade convenience.In dream work, there is (of course) the possibility of a placebo effect, and I cannot categorically claim that this paste did not work for someone, somewhere.Other convenience scholars agree, although some convenience practitioners believe we are being unnecessarily pedantic in bestowing any kind of legitimacy to products such as the No 1 "Eclipse" Dream Remover.Pedantic or not, here it is. 
This archival drawer holds completed work, scraps, rough edges, and ongoing mistakes.
It holds everything that was found, blacked out, scribbled over, finished, unfinished, discarded. It all counts.
Come back next week to see more ephemera.