Archive for June, 2010

Free! Lancing!

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Okay, so one of the work things going on that I couldn’t talk about yesterday is this:  Justin is going freelance!

After dealing with inter-personal issues at his workplace for many, many months, he’s taken the plunge and is going to work for himself!  He went in this morning and told them that he was leaving and it has been an EXCITING and SCARY thing all at the same time.  We’re very excited about the opportunity for him to step out and open his own business.  And we’re also scared about the whole idea that there might not be anything underfoot when he steps out.  But we’re trusting that it’s going to work out!  We have plans!  Plus, Justin had a really great meeting this afternoon with a business who is going to use him as their contracted web designer (and pay him two times as much!).  And there are a few other balls that we’re trying to catch, too, but I’ll stay mum on those until we actually hear more from them.

Anyway!  I couldn’t write about it before, for obvious reasons, but now you know!  It’s kind of scary!  But Justin’s learned a lot in the two years and some that he’s been working there and we’re excited about seeing how well we can handle this on our own!

Pray for us!  We could really use it!  :)

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Happenings lately

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Okay, time for a broad update on what’s been going on in Kylene-land.

I’m back on the diet again after taking about a month off to handle with stress and not logging while we had company in town.  But I’ve been logging again for 15 days now and my scale at home (that’s not terribly accurate) gave me a whole long line of 0’s on Saturday that made me very excited.  It’s gone back up a couple pounds, but that’s what happens when I sit down with a bag of M&Ms on one day and a big plate of Kung Pao chicken the next.  But I thoroughly intend for it to be back down again by Saturday.  I might not make it down the full 50 pounds before my doctor appointment at the beginning of September, but I’m going to be pretty darn close!

I don’t know exactly how much weight I’m going to end up losing in the end, but my goal right now is to get my body fat percentage down around 25%.  Wherever I land poundage-wise is where I’ll end up, but I want to get that percentage down there.  I started at 42.2%.  Right now I’m at 38.2%.  Once I get under 32%, I’ll no longer be considered “obese” and THAT will be a very happy day.  :)

The car thing is an end as far as I know.  I finally called the claims department on Friday to ask what the progress was on the file and they told me that they had denied the claim.  Wohoo!!  I mean, the woman didn’t have a leg to stand on but it’s still nice to have things work out the way that they’re SUPPOSED to work.  I didn’t hit her, I shouldn’t have to pay for it.  And I’m not!

As far as I’m concerned, the matter is now closed.  She can try to appeal the decision or take me to small claims court, but the insurance is going to back me up if she does that.  I’m going to assume that she’s not going to be quite that desperate and just stop thinking about the whole thing.  And now I can finally try to get the paint off my car, since I’ve been waiting until everything was resolved to try to work on that.  Before I was just being lazy.  But now I have more motivation to get it off.

There are things happening in the job front that I’m not comfortable talking about right now.  You know that feeling like if you talk about it, you might jinx the whole thing?  THAT.  But hopefully I’ll have news for you there in a while.

I am still going to be briefly unemployed while the whole place shuts down for a couple weeks, but I’m looking forward to the time away from work.  It’ll be nice.  I’m hoping to get a bunch of projects done around the house.  Because, you know, there’s nothing like a vacation to get some work done around the house.  What?  Relax?  I don’t have time to relax!

In more trivial news, I’ve developed an allergy to my face lotion.  I’ve been using it for a while and I’m about halfway through this bottle, but the last few times I tried to use it, I broke out in hives.  It wasn’t pleasant.  My only hypothesis is that there’s almond oil in the lotion.  Of my nut allergies, almonds were pretty low on the list of reactions, so I picked up a box of cranberry-pomegranate granola bars (with almonds) and was eating one of those a day.  And then I broke out in hives from my lotion.  So I’m not eating the bars any more and I’m using aloe vera to moisturize my face, since we didn’t have anything else in the house that would work.  Avoidance is effective and I’m doing just fine.  But it’s kind of a bummer because I was fond of that lotion.

And to end on a more UP tone, I have a trip coming up to visit several people and I’m SO EXCITED about it!  I’ve mentioned it here before, but I’m still just beyond thrilled to get to take this trip.  I didn’t expect to be able to spend time with my siblings and it’s going to be so much fun!  Lots of people know about it, too, because I can’t stop talking about it.  I’ve already started my packing list—I’ve been trying to figure out how to pack everything in a carry-on so we don’t have to check our luggage.

But mostly, I just think, “I get to see the kidlets!”  “I get to see my siblings!”  “I get to see Grandma!”  “I get to see the Barnetts!”  And try to figure out how I could fit seeing more people into the tiny amount of time that we’ll be in each place.  Like Sara!  And Gillian!  And Mom and Dad!!

But before that, I’ve got 3 projects that need to be completely finished up before the end of this week and 3 other documents that need to be released and mailed off for approval before next Tuesday, at the absolute latest.  I have a lot of work to finish up.

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Check out my idea!

Monday, June 21st, 2010

I honestly had a post going about news lately, but I was doing it at lunch and got distracted by other things.  Instead, I’ve got to show you this thing I thought of while making my salad for lunch tomorrow!

Look:

This is a cookie sheet!  It fits perfectly over the sink of our place.  I had it out because I made bread out of the over-ripe pears yesterday and when I washed the romaine it was so easy to just set it on there and let it dry for a bit while I went to cut cucumber.

It worked so well!  The water dripped right through and didn’t spill over the counter like it would normally with our cutting board.  And once I came back to cut the romaine, I just cut it on the cookie sheet, too.  The water kept running on through the mesh instead of all over my counter!

Plus, when I wanted to drop things into the sink, it was just a little ways to reach, and I could see everything that was underneath.  So when I dropped my knife that I’d used for the cucumber, I didn’t have to go groping around blindly–I could see exactly where it had gone.

Anyway, I thought it was a fantastic idea and I just had to share it.  I’ll have more to say soon.

Cheers!

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Doing some updating around here

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

WordPress came out with a new update, which has some changes that my last template couldn’t support.  So I’ll be messing around with the look around here for a little while.  Please pardon my mess!

And I am going to do a post about Grandma Mic (is that how to spell her name? I’ve never been clear on that) soon.  Things have just been crazy, making it hard for my creative side to think and write.

More news on that soon-ish.  But for right now, I’m going to play with code a little bit.

OH!  HAPPY FATHER’S DAY, DAD!!!  Love you lots!!

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Memories of Grandma Fritz’s house

Monday, June 14th, 2010

I’ve been having a difficult time figuring out how to write about my grandparents.  It seemed like it shouldn’t be that hard.  After all, I’d written up a couple pages already before I stopped and decided I should do it differently.  And then I started to really think about how I remember my trips to their homes and how my memories of each aren’t even close to being stored the same way and I started trying to find a way to categorize the whole situation and it just got out of hand.

So I’m going to stop thinking so much and just write.  And hopefully what I end up with will make some vague semblance of logic.  Or at least be mildly entertaining to read.  Especially for those of you who know what I’m talking about.

When I was younger, Mom and Dad would drop us kids off at Grandma Fritz’s house for . . . what was it?   One week?  Two weeks?  It felt like two weeks, but maybe it was shorter.  Time passes differently when you’re younger.  But they were fun weeks.  We maybe didn’t behave the way we should have – we spent too many hours sitting in front of the television instead of sitting listening to their stories.  But they had cable!  And Nickelodeon!  And air conditioning!  And Grandma was always making sure that we had enough to eat, so there was always something to snack on.

We’d spend a little time with our cousins who were close to our age.  We’d go on trips to the zoo.  I have fond memories of going to the zoo with my grandparents and the aunt who lived with them at the time.  I remember going to see where my aunt worked, when she worked at an eye doctor’s office for a while.  It was a dark office with wooden desks and it felt so expensive.  In the car I’d sit and look at the wonderfully beautiful purple star sapphire ring that she wore and wonder about the moles that popped out of her skin and how she managed to not snag them on things and tear them off.

Whenever I smell gold Dial soap, it reminds me of my grandma’s house.  They always had Dial soap in the bathroom; we had Ivory soap at home and it was much more harsh.  When I have sandwiches with cheese, deli meat, iceberg lettuce, and mayo or braunschweiger, it reminds me of my grandma because we’d eat those so often when we were there.  And it was such a delicacy because at home we’d never have sandwiches with something other than bologna or peanut butter and jelly.  She’d give us instant oatmeal for breakfast, wonderful and delicious after Malt-o-Meal at home.

The front door of her house leads into a small, dark porch that leads into the kitchen, and there’s a sweet, musty smell in that room that I always think of as The Smell of Grandma’s house.  It’s the first thing we’d smell when we got to the house.  We’d sit on the floor of that porch and play with toys.  Cars in a garage with a spiral drive up and down.  Others that I can only vaguely remember.

There’s a room upstairs that I think was supposed to be a bathroom but that we weren’t allowed to go into because the floor wasn’t sturdy.  My memory might be completely off on that one, but it’s what I remember.  I used to wonder what that room could look like without a floor – dark, with boxes around the corners of a black, gaping hole.  I never stopped to think about what would happen to the first floor if there wasn’t a floor in that room. 

We weren’t allowed into the basement, either.  It was Grandpa’s territory and it wasn’t safe for children.  Same with the garage.  There was a long bookshelf at the top of the stairs in the house that held his AC Delco books.  Grandma used to call him “Grumpa” when his blood-sugar was off balance and he hadn’t taken his medicine.

There was a swing on a tree in the back yard and we’d play there.  There’s a huge empty field behind the house where enormous electrical poles stand holding the wires and we’d run around there sometimes.  There was a park a little ways down the road and we’d go down there and play, too, when someone would walk us there.

There were three bedrooms upstairs:  one for my aunt and two smaller ones where we kids would sleep while we were there.  When we arrived, there’d be something waiting for us—a new toothbrush, usually.  Maybe some chocolate or a small toy.

There was a cat named Darcy who thought she was a dog and would try to bark, but mostly stayed to herself.  They had a dog, whose name escapes me at the moment and that surprises me because they had her for years.  (Her?  Him?)  Sandy?  Is that the dog she has now or the dog they had before?  The dog they have now was a hyper thing, but she’d bring her own pillow around to lay her head on it.

The organ in the dining room that didn’t work but had old wedding photos on the top of it.  The photos of my dad and his siblings on the wall of the dining room.  The many, many photos lining the walls of the living room.  The huge ceramic vase or butter churn or whatever it was sitting in the corner.  The dark shelves filled with mysterious things in the stairs leading out to the back door.

Textures are a big part of my memories at her house.  The feeling of the short berber carpet in the kitchen and bathroom.  The shag carpeting on the floor of the rest of the house.  The scratchy green fabric on Grandpa’s chair.  The smooth paint on the floor of the screened-in porch.  The softness of the skin on Grandma’s hands.  The cold gray metal desk in the dining room.  The springy back of the turtle-shaped footstool.

We would have parties and all my aunts and uncles would come over.  We’d have dinner that Grandma would spend hours cooking: ham and rolls and veggies and pies.  The kids would sit at a card table off to the side while the adults all crammed to fit at the dining room table.  White curtains covered windows that lined the outside wall of the dining room, defusing the bright afternoon light.  We kids would plot ways to get more dinner rolls.

On Sundays, we’d go to church and sit in Sunday School classes where we didn’t know anyone and sit through sermons where Grandma would pass us Cert mints.  When we got home, Grandpa would be sitting watching cars go around and around in circles on TV.  Later, we’d get to watch old movies like “Show Boat” and “South Pacific” and “Oklahoma!” 

I get sad thinking about Grandpa.  I miss him.  My last memories of him are at Erica’s graduation, sitting in Pizza Hut and talking with him about how his eyes watered because of his diabetes.

And I think that’s where I’m going to stop with this one.  Abruptly, without any great transition, on a sad note.  I’m at the top of the third page of my Word document, which means I’ve babbled on for a long time.  I should let you get back to whatever you were doing before you stopped by.  But before you go, family members, how accurate is my memory?  And did I spark any memories of your own?

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