The Blood Moon Returns: This Time It’s Bigger

From the skies that brought to you our blood moon in April comes a bigger, more glorious total lunar eclipse next Wednesday: Blood Moon 2.

Early morning on October 8, us West Coast folks will get to feast our eyes on our second blood moon this year, according to KTLA. If you’re able to stay up, you’ll get to see the moon glow with a reddish-orange hue; the best times to view the total eclipse are between 3:25 a.m. PDT to 4:24 a.m. PDT. However, if you feel so inclined to watch the entire gradual process from start to finish, look up at the skies between the hours of 1:15 a.m. PDT to 6:30 a.m. PDT

Blood moon seen from Alhambra in April (Photo by Steven Hartono/onoTarh Productions)

Blood moon seen from Alhambra in April (Photo by Steven Hartono/onoTarh Productions)

The blood moon will look 5.3 percent bigger than the one in April, which is almost the size of a supermoon. KQED reports this one’s special because the sun, Earth and moon will all be aligned, with the moon going through the Earth’s shadow.

The blood moon gets its reddish glow from when the earth moves between the sun and the moon, causing light to spread out to different points from the planet’s sunrises and sunsets and bounce onto the moon’s surface.

The next blood moons will occur on April 4, 2015 and Sept. 28, 2015.

-Jean Trinh, LAist

Catalyst will be at the Walnut Family Festival! – October 11 All day @ Suzanne Park in Walnut, CA

Get your Christmas shopping done early at the festival for personalized service, or online.
http://www.catalystjewelry.com/welcome.html
http://catalystjewelry.storenvy.com/

It only takes one to be a catalyst,
will it be you?

Your very own Catalyst, made it into the Newspapers! (again!)

MPK Night Market draws a crowd

MPK Night Market's numerous food trucks and vendors draw large crowds. | Photos by Lucy Truong
MPK Night Market’s numerous food trucks and vendors draw large crowds. | Photos by Lucy Truong

Monterey Park’s MPK Night Market drew crowds Friday. Visitors tried food trucks, browsed vendors, played carnival games, drank at the wine and beer garden, and listened to live music. Check out these photos from the free monthly event.

Have any photos you’d like to share? Email them to editor@alhambrasource.org!

A guest checks the Belly Bomb food truck menu before placing an order.

A guest checks the Belly Bomb food truck menu before placing an order.

Local youth share and snack on potato swirls sold by Swirls Potato & Lemonade.

Local youth share and snack on potato swirls sold by Swirls Potato & Lemonade.

A guest browses figurines on sale at one of the night market's vendor stands.

A guest browses figurines on sale at one of the night market’s vendor stands.

A visitor pushes a baby stroller past MPK Night Market signage. The event was open to guests of all ages.

A visitor pushes a baby stroller past MPK Night Market signage. The event was open to guests of all ages.

A local artist adds details to a painting during a live art demonstration at the night market's art walk.

A local artist adds details to a painting during a live art demonstration at the night market’s art walk.

Young visitors wait in a long line to buy from Aunty Merry's food stand.

Young visitors wait in a long line to buy from Aunty Merry’s food stand.

A vendor observes the night market crowd while a guest looks at the jewelry on sale.

A vendor observes the night market crowd while a guest looks at the jewelry on sale.

It only takes one.
Will you be a Catalyst today?
Shop now!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: LUCY TRUONG

Lucy Truong is a communications professional living in the San Gabriel Valley. Born and raised in “the SGV”, she graduated cum laude from UC San Diego with a Bachelor of Arts in Communication and minors in Art History and Chinese Studies. Lucy is interested in covering stories on race, class, identity, immigration, culture, and the arts. She shoots concert photography during her spare time.

Original Article: http://www.alhambrasource.org/news/mpk-night-market-draws-crowd?utm_source=Alhambra+Source+Master+List&utm_campaign=ff3294e049-Newsletter_98_09_28_2012_9_28_2012&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_1f63355322-ff3294e049-57087257

Free Slurpee Day at 7-Eleven!

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Today at 7-11 (eleven) you can get a free slurpee!

It’s only 7.11 oz so maybe you can do what I do to maximize it!

Stay cool on this hot Southern California day by stopping by any of the hundreds of seven eleven stores and get your free slurpee!

Have a Happy Friday!!!

It only takes one.
Will you be a catalyst today?
Shop now!
http://catalystjewelry.storenvy.com/

Source: http://www.latimes.com/food/dailydish/la-dd-free-slurpees-friday-7-eleven-20140709-story.html

10 Best Restaurants in Los Angeles for Outdoor Dining

Last time we featured L.A. spots with great Happy Hours and this time we’ll feature some of L.A.’s best restaurants for outdoor dinning experiences.  Now that the weather has cooled off a bit and we’re no longer in triple-digit-temps, the outdoors can be once again enjoyed by Angelinos and the fine dinning. Let the ambiance and setting help you enjoy your amazing food while you create wonderful memories with the other half of your party-for-two.

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  • Nobu Malibu

Summer living — and eating — in Los Angeles is sweet. From sweeping seaside and rooftop views to Spanish-style patios and glamorous Hollywood hangs, Los Angeles offers an amazing selection of restaurants where you can take in the sights on your plate and the natural ones around you at the same time. Turn the page for the city’s 10 best outdoor patios.

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  • AOC

10. AOC:

Step inside the new iteration of AOC and out its wide-open side doors for a little taste of California Wine Country or maybe the European countryside. The restaurant spills out into the patio, an adjoining room with three walls and no roof. There are two family-style booths set back into tiled walls on each end and cute country-style windows all around. But the best view is up — at the restaurant’s balcony, its foliage creeping along the edges of the roof or just straight above at the expansive sky. Serving both lunch and dinner, Suzanne Goin and Caroline Styne’s wine bar also, unsurprisingly, boasts an extensive wine list of several pages, which arrives on a clipboard. What to order: clams in sherry and garlic with toast. 8700 W. 3rd St., Los Angeles, 310-859-9859.

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  • The Roof Garden at The Peninsula Beverly Hills

9. The Roof Garden at The Peninsula Beverly Hills:

The Peninsula in Beverly Hills comes off as a playground for the rich and famous. But, travel through the high tea lounge, up the elevators to the penthouse and past the spa and a relaxing Roof Garden appears with a vacation vibe. The pool is even further up the steps, so the noise from frolicking families can only be heard on a stroll to the edge of the patio for a bird’s-eye view of L.A. Every weekend evening through September 1, executive chef David Codney fires up the grill and serves barbecued specialties, including baby back ribs, duck tacos and Australian rock lobster tail. What to order: fish tacos. 9882 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills; 310-551-2888.

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  • Wilshire

8. Wilshire:

From the outside, it’s hard to imagine a romantic back patio hidden behind Santa Monica’s Wilshire restaurant. Past the dimly lit and lively bar and out the back doors, there’s a very popular outdoor area that’s still going strong after eight years. It’s lodged between a glass and a brick building, New York City-style, with towering trees strung with little bright lights, a fireplace-in-a-box and an outdoor bar. It’s romantic and ideal for an anniversary, and families and large groups also eat here, along with noted locals like Oliver Stone and Jason Segal. What to order: fontina and smoked mozzarella mac ‘n’ cheese with spinach. 2454 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica; 310-586-1707.

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  • Malibu Seafood

7. Malibu Seafood:

On an average summer afternoon, 20 people wait to order food in a line that travels out of the small hut, down the steps and spills into the parking lot. Malibu Seafood is split into two sides: The right is the tiny fish market, and the left is the counter to order and pay for food. The pick-up window is around the side, and there are three levels of picnic tables, packed with families, couples and friends, which travel up the side of the PCH. Co-owner Jon Christensen says they make the tartar sauce, chowder and coleslaw in-house daily, and the fish is caught every day but Sunday. What to order: fish and chips. 25653 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu; 310-456-3430.

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  • The Backyard at The W

6. The Backyard at The W:

Sitting in The Backyard of W Los Angeles – Westwood offers three types of views: cityscape, poolside charm and natural splendor. Designer Thom Filicia (from Queer Eye for the Straight Guy) went with a woodsy feel, with lots of green — trees, grass, and gardens — even adding a waterfall. It’s zen enough for the Lakers’ Metta World Peace, who apparently takes meetings here. The tables aren’t too close to the pool, but they’re close enough to the action when Wet Sundays, a summer pool party, rolls around at 11 a.m. People chill in the private cabanas and listen to a different lineup of DJs each Sunday. Executive chef Dakota Weiss has created her own line of popcorn (caramel, curry, pistachios and bacon), which she just might surprise guests with on a whim. What to order: backyard cheeseburger with white cheddar, fried pickles, pretzel bun and sweet potato fries. 930 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles; 310-208-8765.

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  • Café Pinot

5. Café Pinot:

For the past few months, the purple Jacaranda trees around L.A. have been magnificent, and they’re on full display at Café Pinot. The restaurant, which nabbed a Wine Spectator Restaurant Award — it’s part of Joachim Splichal’s Patina Group — is located beside a mini-park area circling a fountain, next door to downtown’s public Central Library. While diners chat and chew, they can stare up at the 1920s landmark library as well as four prominent skyscrapers and a forest of well-manicured, slender trees all pointing at something in the sky. The patio menu is pricey, and so coming soon, chef Sydney Hunter III is introducing bar bites, cheaper eats like sliders, so people can sit and snack outside without ordering a full dinner. What to order: hamachi with kumquat conserva, avocado, micro cilantro, breakfast radish, fried shallots. 700 W. 5th St., Los Angeles; 213-239-6500.

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  • Chateau Marmont

4. Chateau Marmont:

Believe the hype. Lounging on the vintage furniture arranged around Chateau Marmont’s garden terrace will make a person feel like a 1930s-era Hollywood movie star. On any given day, movie producers, break-out young screenwriters and gorgeous starlets are likely dining — and schmoozing — at this noted establishment. And, most regular folk want in on the action: the two French girls vacationing in L.A. and eating ice cream, the mother-and-daughter duo asking the waiter a string of questions and the lady sitting alone wearing sunglasses at a table for two. Although the lively Bar Marmont is down the hill, the restaurant’s bar has its own spirited following for those who like a little nosh with their late-night cocktails. What to order: spaghetti Bolognese. 8221 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood; 323-656-1010.

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  • Cliff’s Edge

3. Cliff’s Edge:

Standing on traffic-y, twisty Sunset Blvd., you might not suspect that Cliff’s Edge offers a hidden oasis of calm on its back, two-level patio. In the center, a massive Ficus tree holds court, surrounded by oversized, empty clam shells and candelabras, of all things. The tables form a horseshoe around the tree, and the second level of seats looks like a long hut perched above, with bamboo shooting up and a pond in the back. In the far corner, the chefs work behind a window into the kitchen, and toward the front is a little service bar, which transforms into an oyster station every Thursday night, also known as Oyster Night. From 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., the little guys are $1. Buckets of champagne, piles of lemons and platters of crushed ice and oysters appear alongside specially created oyster-friendly cocktails. What to order: oysters. 3626 W Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles; 323-666-6116.

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  • Coast at Shutters on the Beach

2. Coast at Shutters on the Beach:

Meals at Coast aren’t just enjoyed by guests of Shutters on the Beach. Plenty of locals have found this treasured spot, which cozies up to the boardwalk. This is a popular place for brunch, especially if you’re lucky enough to get any of the three booths hugging the sand. Because the restaurant is slightly sunken, it feels as if you’re in a fish bowl or submarine looking out at the joggers and people passing by as if they were interesting marine life. These are the seats to score. Although only Shutters guests can make brunch reservations, general manager Christopher Roman says he and his friendly staff will try their hardest to accommodate requests for the booths. What to order: lemon ricotta pancakes with fresh berries. One Pico Blvd., Santa Monica; 310-458-0030.

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  • Nobu Malibu

1. Nobu Malibu:

The view from Nobu Malibu is magnificent. Tables run along the front balcony of the restaurant, which rises above the sandy beach and lapping waves. Every view is an ocean view — to the north, south and west — and every hour is the right hour for a visit. At lunch, the light blue sky rests on the brilliant blue sea. People stand and sit on the edge of the Japanese garden, listening to soulful samba, waiting for the doors to open at noon. Come for dinner and catch one of the world’s most beautiful sunsets. What to order: Tai sweet shiso with red snapper and crispy shiitake mushrooms. 22706 E. Pacific Coast Hwy, Malibu; 310-317-9140.

Written by Jessica Koslow.Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 8:31AM

Ready to plan a proposal at one of these restaurants? Be sure to contact Catalyst Jewelry (sales@catalystjewelry.com) for all your bridal and engagement jewelry needs! Just want to find some beautiful everyday jewelry? Check out http://www.CatalystJewelry.com and Go Shop!

Obamajam 2014

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Well, it looks like President Barack Obama will be making his rounds out to Los Angeles this week, which means Angelenos will be experiencing… Obamajam 2014.

Our President will be flying into LAX TODAY, Wednesday May 7th (and on the road during peak traffic) to make it in time for the USC Shoah Foundation’s 20th anniversary dinner, according to LA Observed. Then on Thursday, he’ll be making appearances at a Democratic National Committee fundraiser and other fundraisers, even trekking out to San Diego. He’s expected to leave our City of Angels late Thursday morning.

The Beverly Hills Police Dept. released this list of streets to avoid:

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

4 p.m. to 6 p.m.: The area around Motor Avenue and Pico Blvd.
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.: The area around Pico Blvd. and Beverly Glen Blvd.
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.: The area around Santa Monica Blvd and Beverly Glen Blvd.
6 p.m. to 8 p.m.: The area around Sunset Blvd. and Beverly Glen Blvd.
6 p.m. to 8 p.m.: The area around Santa Monica Blvd. and Avenue of the Stars

Thursday, May 8, 2014

9 a.m. to 11 a.m.: The area around Santa Monica Blvd. and Avenue of the Stars
9 a.m. to 11 a.m.: All trucks driving down Wilshire Blvd. between Santa Monica and Avenue of the Stars
9 a.m. to 11 a.m.: The area around Pico Blvd. and Motor Avenue

Thankfully. we at Catalyst Jewelry do not have a brick-and-mortar storefront at this time. We will be unaffected by the traffic that normally deters customers from even leaving their homes.  Our online store is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days of the year!  We never close!

 http://catalystjewelry.storenvy.com/
It only takes one.
Will you be a Catalyst today?

That “sometimes” annoying question

For all you newly married couples out there, I’m sure you’ve heard this before shortly after your wedding.

“So, when are you two going to have kids?”
Or if your mom is asking the question it sounds more like, “So, when do I get my grandchildren?”

This is the similar line of questioning that happens once you exit college.

“So, what are you going to do with your life?”  
Or if your mom is asking the question it sounds more like, “So, when are you going to get off your butt and do something with your degree so that I can brag to my friends about the amazing job offer you’re going to take instead of defending your jobless-self as you sit in your room eating Cheetos and watching Netflix in your pajamas?”

This curious question is the type of question that we all hate fielding, but once it is asked we are obligated to give remarks.  It becomes somewhat of an interrogation at that point.  We avoid it in social situations, at church, family get-togethers, and even at home.

Marriage is an invitation for another person to step into what used to be a simple and comfortable routine as a single.  Now you have to learn how to live life all over again with this other person.  It’s not convenient, it’s commitment.  Throwing a baby into the mix too soon is generally not what newly-weds seek.  “Let me completely change my life by allowing this other person into my life, and just to make things extra fun, let’s make another person who will completely take over our lives and disrupt all attempts at creating a cohesive home-life, all within the first six months of marriage!”  

Yikes!

http://www.refinery29.com/having-a-baby

^ Read that for another bloggers thoughts on this subject.

It only takes one.
Will you be a Catalyst today?

Mother’s day is coming soon, are you ready?
Stop by and shop at http://catalystjewelry.storenvy.com/

1 Corinthians 13:6

1 Corinthians 13:1-6 Amplified Bible (AMP)

1 If I [can] speak in the tongues of men and [even] of angels, but have not love (that reasoning, intentional, spiritual devotion such as is inspired by God’s love for and in us), I am only a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.
2 And if I have prophetic powers (the gift of interpreting the divine will and purpose), and understand all the secret truths and mysteries and possess all knowledge, and if I have [sufficient] faith so that I can remove mountains, but have not love (God’s love in me) I am nothing (a useless nobody). 
3 Even if I dole out all that I have [to the poor in providing] food, and if I surrender my body to be burned or in order that I may glory, but have not love (God’s love in me), I gain nothing.
4 Love endures long and is patient and kind; love never is envious nor boils over with jealousy, is not boastful or vainglorious, does not display itself haughtily.
5 It is not conceited (arrogant and inflated with pride); it is not rude (unmannerly) and does not act unbecomingly.  Love (God’s love in us) does not insist on its’ own rights or its own way, for it is not self-seeking; it is not touchy or fretful or resentful; it takes no account of the evil done to it [it pays no attention to a suffered wrong]. 

6 It does not rejoice at injustice and unrighteousness, but rejoices when right and truth prevail. 

Most of us don’t find ourselves cheering for the antagonist in our favorite books, movies, or TV shows.  We generally want good to prevail in the end.  We also generally speaking like happy endings.  Plots where everyone dies at the end are generally not the most uplifting of endings.  

We wouldn’t find ourselves laughing at a funeral.
We wouldn’t find ourselves joyful over hearing another story of rape on the evening news.
We wouldn’t find ourselves encouraging or promoting senseless violence in our children.

Wait a second…

Most of us are guilty of that last one under the guise of entertainment or that it’s harmless.  With all the media that is so widely accessible today choosing to embrace the good vs. the evil is a greater challenge than ever.  Good and truth must prevail.  We wouldn’t encourage our children to lie, would we?  They already know how to lie; it’s teaching them truthfulness and honesty that is the challenge that parents are charged with in child-rearing.  Technology and parenting is an entirely separate post unto itself.

This concept permeates more of our lives than we think it does.  Take a moment and marinate with this.  

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Injustice is when good people sit, watch, and do nothing. 

It only takes one.
Will you be a Catalyst today?
Stop by and shop at http://catalystjewelry.storenvy.com/

1 Corinthians 13:3

1 Corinthians 13:3

(Amplified Bible AMP)

Even if I dole out all that I have [to the poor in providing] food, and if I surrender my body to be burned or in order that I may glory, but have not love (God’s love in me), I gain nothing.

Paul continues writing to the church in Corinth.  For those of us who are familiar with the Bible, in the book of James he writes that faith without works is dead.  Paul is talking about sacrificial giving and doing stuff.  It’s not enough to have faith.  Faith is a verb that translates to risk.  It’s easy to give when you have abundance.  You can give of your resources that you aren’t using.  There are those who possess millions of dollars and they don’t even blink an eye when they write a check for tens of thousands of dollars to charity of philanthropic causes.  That’s easy to give when you have abundance.  Jesus honored the poor woman’s gift more than the extravagant one.  Though it was very little, but it was all that she had.

Most of us are not in financial abundance, however.  Choosing to give out of lack is better.  Sacrificial giving of resources or even one’s own time is not for personal glory.  Our reward is not in the recognition of giving.  Giving is an act of humility and compassion.  It recognizes that we live in a fallen and broken world that needs help and needs love.  Without the love of God in me as my motivator and cause for compassion, then my gift is in vain.  God cares a lot about the purity of our motives.  

This capitalistic society is not the most conducive to giving.  It’s a society steeped in independence and self-reliance.  Every man for himself.  “If you have not, it is because you do not work hard enough.”

Now more than ever, the words of Paul may be what we need to hear.  Take a look to the left and to the right or think about people you see or even people you know.  Who could use a hand.  Jesus said that when we clothe and feed others, we are clothing and feeding Jesus, Himself.  Even when the Pharisees ask Jesus about the greatest commandment of all, Jesus answers back with TWO commandments, because the two cannot be separated.  Love the Lord God with all your mind, heart, soul, and strength and love others.  

This is partially why we exist; to help others and serve God.  
Will you help those in need?

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It only takes one.
Will you be a Catalyst today?

 Stop by and shop at http://catalystjewelry.storenvy.com/

Love Week Day 3

Commitment

For a lot of us we see commitment fail all around us.  Look no further than most Hollywood marriages.  Our culture cultivates the pervasive idea that it’s ok to back down from your word.  If you promise to grab coffee with a friend after work, but something else comes along you merely cancel on them either because the situation is more important than coffee or it could be as frivolous as something-more-exciting-than-coffee came up.  Technology even makes it easier to lie about plans.  We might not be busy at all, but lying via text message makes us feel way less guilty than having to say it over the phone or even face-to-face.  Even in marriage before a crowd of witnesses and God we back out of our commitment.

Our digital culture has changed tremendously in the last decade in how children come up in school.  I didn’t have a computer in my home until I was a freshman in high school.  Making a mistake or changing your mind on the computer is as easily as pressing ‘backspace’.  Starting over is as simple as drag and delete.  Making a written error with paper and pen used to be an ugly scratch-out, or it meant starting all over again.  White-out came along and that was a game changer!  Making a typographical error on a typewriter meant ripping the paper out and starting that page all over again.  I had to be deliberate with what I wanted to put down on paper and very careful with how fast I did it so I didn’t have to start over again or end up with some horrible errors on my page.

What relevance does this have to commitment?

Being decisive, being intentional, and doing things on purpose.  This concept of permanence is foreign to us.  I don’t need to remind you of the dismal divorce statistics in America to tell you that we don’t honor commitment in our marriages and this even extends to our jobs.  Many people will change jobs several times and never really settle into one that they can stay at for a long time.  In our parents’ and grandparents’ generations you found a job and were loyal to that company until you retired and then they give you a gold watch to appreciate you and honor your loyalty.  Coming back to marriage; of those who do re-marry a second time, still a percentage of them will re-marry a third time!

But a marriage is not your day job nor is it a hand-written document.  Marriage is a living breathing thing with a living breathing person.  You can’t just trade her in for a new one if she gets really ill.  You can’t just trade him in if he never takes out the trash until you tell him 10+ times and you certainly can’t try a different flavor if “you’re just not feeling the love anymore”.  The concept of permanence is foreign to us.

Love is commitment.
Love is sacrifice.
Love is hard work.
Marriage is commitment.
Marriage is sacrifice.
Marriage is hard work.

You need love to have a marriage and a marriage is empty without love.  Love is more than feelings.  Feelings are not what brings couples through difficult times.  “For better or worse” and “Till death do us part” need to become meaningful once again, forever.

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It only takes one.
Will you be a catalyst today?

Visit us at http://CatalystJewelry.com
Use promo code “CatalystValentine” to receive 20% off your purchase.