Monday, January 17, 2011

Dreamin'

I like people who dream, as I'm a dreamer myself.  This guy had some pretty lofty dreams.  What if we all had the audacity to dream like Dr. King?



My favorite quotes by the great dreamer, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr:
"Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that.  Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that."
"A man who won't die for something is not fit to live."  
This begs the question of - what am I willing to die for?

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

New Jersey and Haggis

Did you know that haggis is made by simmering sheep parts inside a sheep stomach?  It tastes about as gross as it sounds.  I ate a bite when I was in Scotland last year.  I don't think I was able to swallow it.

Here is a photo of me in Edinboro.  (There is no proof in the haggis.  I don't think I took any pictures of me eating this Scottish dish.  That is likely best for all of us.)  I'll come back to the stomach.



On June 22, 2011 I will have lived in Denver for nine years.  Just writing that last sentence makes me feel old.  I love Colorado.  There are many perks of the Centennial state.  These include mountains, grocery baggers who ask if you want help to your car, sisters and cousins that live nearby, and property taxes that make people from New Jersey squirm.    

Most of me has adapted to Colorado.  My asthmatic lungs somehow like the lower oxygen level.  My pesky sinuses enjoy the dry, mold free climate.  My wallet (and my husband) like the reasonable cost of living.  

However, one part of me has not evolved - my stomach.  It stays true to its New Jersey origins.  Colorado  restaurants and food options leave something to be desired.  I'll give one exception to green chili.  There are chain restaurants everywhere you look, and a true mom-and-pop family shop is really, really hard to find.  I'll bet you couldn't buy haggis in this state if you tried.  (I'll pay you $5 if you find some.)  I'm not really wishing for another bite of haggis.  I'm wishing for some food with personality.  My favorite personalities include a real bagel or an authentic slice of pizza.  I'd even settle for a great chunk of buffalo mozzarella.  If you know of the whereabouts, please tell me.  

Case in point:  A few years back, I sent my adorable husband out to buy me a salt bagel.  Just thinking about salt bagels causes a spike in my saliva production.  Not wanting to watch me drool, he went out to to find one for me.      

Einsteins:  "A SALT bagel??  Honey, there is no such thing."  


That lady needs to get out a bit more.  She is missing out on a very important piece of life.  Maybe Einstein isn't so smart after all.  Michael went to two more stores before finally giving up.

I've gotten pretty good at bribing my mother into bringing along a bag of my favorite bagels (Everything) in her suitcase when she visits.  She even puts up with her clothes smelling like garlic for the duration of her visit.  She loves me.  

My stomach hasn't adjusted to Denver, and I'm not sure it ever will.  I have settled on flying it back to New Jersey a few times a year.  It's cheaper than the difference in property taxes.     

Monday, January 10, 2011

The Evil Empire



I am sitting in McDonalds.  Technically, I hate McDonalds.  (Well, except for their hash browns.  I really love those, no matter how much I try to tell myself that I don't.)  I watched some awful movie a few years back about how Ronald's french fries look the same after sitting in a jar for 6 months.  They don't grow mold or decompose.  Fascinating, really.

Anyhow, I'm in McDonalds surfing the internet working before my appointment with my naturopathic doctor.  She tells me to eat things like Brazilian nuts and seaweed.  She thinks McDonalds is an empire of evil.

I hope she doesn't smell their french fry oil on me.  

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Blog Envy

I have blog envy.  (Does that count as one of the seven deadly sins?) 











Blogs are everywhere you look.  A quality blog, however, is something to collect.  Honest and interesting words warm my soul.  I bookmark the great ones, and read them often.  I am sometimes obsessive in my search for updated postings on my favorite blogs.  I follow the blogs of friends, acquaintances and strangers alike.  I love stepping outside of my own lens and looking through someone else's, albeit for a brief moment in time.  There is beauty in that.  

I have to say it:  Poor writing and grammar does not warm my soul; rather, it makes it feel cold and dead.  I skip over those words/blogs, lest they are written by someone I love.  For you, my dear friends, my tolerance level experiences a temporary increase.  You're worth it.  Count it as love.

Nonetheless, I was starting to get jealous of all of you blogsmiths, so I pondered having a blog of my own.  Allow me to walk you through my thought process:

Does the internet need another blog?  (Probably not.)
Do I have anything interesting to say?  (Probably not.)
Will anyone read my blog?  (Probably not.)
Great!  I should start a blog!

And so it began.

Here are the blogging goals for this superhero to live by:
  1. I shall document my thoughts with my best effort in grammatical accuracy.
  2. I shall blog regularly - particularly in the moments when I don't want to.
  3. I shall write about that which  I am passionate about.    
  4. I will be transparent.  (Spare me your judgment, though I will accept grammatical corrections - see #1.)
Anyone who knows me knows that follow-through is not on my list of strengths.  Particularly when I don't have a village/team/husband to keep me accountable.  I'm the idea girl - and this idea girl is not fond of rules.  (Even if they are my own.)  I just wrote four rules for myself.  What was I thinking?  Well, if I don't follow my rules, I suppose that I'll be left with the blog envy I started with.  And I'll only have myself to blame.  I might try to blame it on you anyhow.

Let's get this party started.