Nina: June 2008 Archives
Tagged by KateyJ....
The Rules: Rules are posted at the beginning. At the end of the post, the player tags 5 people and posts their names. Then the player goes to each of the "named" people's blogs and leaves a comment, letting them know they've been tagged and asking them to read your blog. If you've been tagged, you do the same, letting the person who tagged you know when you've posted your answer. Your answer, of course, is the answer to the following questions. Here we go!
1. What was I doing 10 years ago?
Living in a condo in Austell with two girlfriends, working as an Asst Office Manager. The company sold air filtration systems for shooting ranges, and I got to attend the NRA convention at the Congress Center that year and meet Steven Tyler and Lou Ferrigno (the original Hulk). I had just started learning to partner dance at Cowboys in Kennesaw, with a guy named Michael who always wore a ballcap backwards, and I was out there 3 nights a week.
2. What are 5 things on my to-do list today?
Target shooting at the range....already done. Really should clean and oil the guns before I put them away--we'll see about that. Invited to go shop with girlfriends at Lennox, but don't want to be tempted to spend....might skip this. Work on photography website and blog. Clean out dishwasher. Glower at evil wireless router still sitting here mocking me. (Lightbulb: call Sherrie about router!)
3. Snacks I enjoy:
On a healthy day: Wasa crackers with peanut butter, yellow apples, granola bars, baby carrots with hummus. On an impulse snacking day: crackers with cheese slices, anything sweet I can find in the house, multiple granola bars in one sitting. On a REALLY bad day: large quantities of chocolate, ice cream, wine
4. Places I've lived:
Charleston, South Carolina (1973-1974)
Birmingham, Alabama(1974-1975)
Lexington, South Carolina(1975-1980)
Chattanooga, TN (1980-1993)
Powder Springs, Georgia (1993-1996)
Austell, Georgia (1996-1997)
Lithia Springs, Georgia (1997-1998)
Dunwoody, Georgia (1998-1999)
Marietta, Georgia (1999- )
5. Things I would do if I were a billionaire:
Immediately pay off my car, credit card, and student debt. Invest like crazy. Set up college funds for my nephews. Set aside "just in case" funds for my sister and my parents. Donate to my church, Hope From Heaven, and Make a Wish Foundation.
Go somewhere in the Bahamas, rent a house and a boat and spend the rest of the summer in a bikini and a sarong. Plan my future trips to Italy and Australia. Buy a ton of awesome camera equipment.
The rules say I have to tag 5 people now. I think everybody has done this now, so I'm going to wuss out and not tag anyone else. :)
OK, it just really amused me to title this blog "Fiber." It is, actually, somewhat about fiber, I swear. But still...
So the fiber I'm talking about is the kind that goes into the mouth and through the gut. We all need it, we all know we need it, but it's not high on anyone's list to discuss. That's not quite as much the case these days due to the winds of change blowing through the dieting community. Now everyone is waking up to the fact that fiber is not only good for old people with digestive issues, but plays a part in GI health for all of us, especially those attempting to eat healthier and/or lose weight. There's probably not a woman alive who doesn't feel at least of twinge of alarm at the beginning of the summer swimsuit season. Thus the googling of weight loss and exercise options and the pantry purging of the junk food. For me, good intentions can only take me so far. I DETEST feeling hungry or deprived. (Those of you who have witnessed my visceral excitement over pizza, ANY pizza, can attest to this) I've tried, people....I have. The food journals, the South Beach, the cleanses, those ridiculous one-square-of cheese diets--nothing ever lasts long. Besides, like most sane people, I realize that healthy eating and maintaining one's weight really needs to be more of a lifestyle change than a white-knuckled multi-week endeavor each summer.
Being on a tight budget these days, I've been trying to find the most economical options. But finding options to put decent quantities of food and drink in my mouth, feel good about it, and on a budget....those are hard to come by. So I felt pretty jazzed by my haul at Big Lots the other day. Here are two options, specifically designed to up the fiber quota and help keep you feeling satisfied. Good for your gut function, too, of course. And CHEAP!
Having recently tried the Special K powdered drink in Tea flavor (BLECK!!), I was only semi-hopeful about this. But it was YUMMY! (This is what I was guzzling in my water bottle at WWKIPD, by the way)
Then there are these crackers. Living alone, I have a hard time getting through a loaf of bread before it starts becoming questionable. A lot of snack crackers are just empty calories, and not that healthy, or economical. But these crackers are crispy and satisfying, and stay good a long time in an airtight container. With a generous dollop of peanut butter, they give me a little protein and fat to tide me over.
Happy snacking!!
With all the router drama going on the last few days, I almost forgot to say something about this past weekend.
Saturday was World Wide Knit In Public Day, and several of our LYS had events. I had another event in the morning I had to attend first, the second annual motorcycle ride in memory of my friend Loren Lilly. Loren was a Cobb County Sheriff's Deputy, newlywed, and all-around great guy who was killed in an accident on his way to work in December of 2006. The first ride to benefit one of his favorite charities (Hope From Heaven) was last April, only a few months after his passing. Another year has passed, and although the feelings are still there, the rawness of emotion was more manageable. (Translation: I wasn't fighting tears all morning)
His widow Jamie was in good spirits, and very excited to ride her new bike. The turnout was HUGE, even bigger than last year. The civilian riders lined up in the Chattahoochee Tech parking lot across the street, leaving the Earl Small's Harley lot for registration, socializing, and the Cobb County uniformed riders who arrived just before the ride. Once Loren's goddaughter Summer sang the national anthem and Loren's pastor prayed to bless our ride, they were off. Jamie and her stepdad Harlan led off, just behind the Honor Guard.
When compared to daily life in a third world country, or say, Iraq, my life is pretty good. I have a lot to be thankful for, I know. But then there are some days, days when just nothing is simple, everything seemingly is wrong, and even relatively simple tasks are hard. Some days, just suck.
Yesterday was one of those days. After purchasing a wireless router over the weekend to enable both my desktop computer and my new laptop to access the internet in my home, a friend who was moving gave me one she still had in the box. So the router I purchased can now be returned, saving me money. Yeah.
Supposedly, everything I needed was in the box, including a CD to guide me through the installation. Uh-huh. In the same way "You can't miss it" almost insures getting lost, a CD to guide the consumer through a simple installation almost guarantees complications. Like many people, I can hang with computer stuff and lingo, until the scenario gets complicated and things NOT addressed by the handy installation CD begins occurring. So I did what anyone would do: I called a friend who speaks computer. Her name is Sherrie, and she is a woman of extreme patience and understanding. We're talking, she had to first clarify terminology, so that when I was hysterically describing plugging the blue wire with the squarish plug into "the box thing", she knew what she was dealing with. It sounded something like, "So going forward, we're going to refer to the black box that is the Comcast Cable Modem as the.....modem, and the D-Link Router box as the.....router. Got it?"
Unfortunately, due to forces beyond anyone's immediate control, our efforts did not meet with success. Here's what the ugly scene looked like in the thick of things...
What you are about to see is not a cell phone training class, a technology demo, or a scene from your local T-Mobile store. No, this is what happens when a group of woman, normally united by love of fiber arts, engage in a feverish discussion about cell phones.
