I am not a morning person. This is most obvious to poor Kevin. I am the type of person who, upon waking, does not want to be spoken to, does not like any noise whatsoever, does not like any interruption to my careful morning routine, and above all, does not like to be forced awake by any other method than the slow crescendo of the voices of Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne on NPR on our Bose radio. Wake me up by any other method, and truly incur my wrath and horrid crankiness.
Poor, poor Kevin.
Ironically, my most favorite time of the week is Sunday mornings. Yes, mornings. Despite the monster that I am to anyone in my path who disturbs my peaceful morning time, I absolutely adore being awake (not being awakened - don't get the two confused) on Sunday mornings. There is nothing more soothing and soul-nourishing than padding into the kitchen, making the coffee while blankly staring out the kitchen window into the neighbors' yards, padding back into the living room, turning on public radio and listening to classical guitar and Sunday baroque and then just enjoying existing. It's simply great. I highly recommend it. Just don't call me and wake me up in the morning to tell me about it.
:)
PS. I just had to put the link to Sunday Baroque and Classical Guitar Alive! for those of you who wish to experience the musical joy I feel on Sundays.
Friday, July 25, 2008
Saturday, July 12, 2008
you know you love your dog when...
* you clean up his barf multiple times a day and can still eat your dinner
* your carpet is covered in fur, you can see it, and you still lay on it to pet your dogs
* you hand-feed your dog so he won't eat his food too fast
* you save up money to buy a several-hundred-dollar brace so your dog won't be in pain when she walks
* you build your dog a custom high chair and line in it soft cushions so his butt won't hurt
* you set up a swimming pool so your dog can do no-impact aerobics to stay fit and protect her joints
* you clean up diarrhea off the carpet - three times - and manage not to kill him afterwards
* you join an online support group for dogs with a special disease and you think this is a completely normal thing to do
* you say "yes" when people ask if you have kids and you haven't ever given birth to anything
* 75% of your photos have at least one dog in them
* your carpet is covered in fur, you can see it, and you still lay on it to pet your dogs
* you hand-feed your dog so he won't eat his food too fast
* you save up money to buy a several-hundred-dollar brace so your dog won't be in pain when she walks
* you build your dog a custom high chair and line in it soft cushions so his butt won't hurt
* you set up a swimming pool so your dog can do no-impact aerobics to stay fit and protect her joints
* you clean up diarrhea off the carpet - three times - and manage not to kill him afterwards
* you join an online support group for dogs with a special disease and you think this is a completely normal thing to do
* you say "yes" when people ask if you have kids and you haven't ever given birth to anything
* 75% of your photos have at least one dog in them
the elusiveness of teaching
In case some of you didn't know, I've switched gears pursuing careers and I'm now on a quest to find a teaching position. I have spent the past year and several months spending time, effort, and money to get professionally certified to teach in Florida. Well, in March I finally earned my certificate. Low and behold, there are no teaching jobs in this county. Across the country the teacher shortage is nationally renown with states offering signing bonuses and competitive salaries. Alas, I live in the one county in all of the USA with a surplus of teachers and the lowest salary in all of Florida. Isn't it ironic, don't cha think?
It's been one crazy roller coaster. One minute they tell you there are plenty of positions; next they fire 153 teachers due to budget cuts; then they say they'll hire 90 for this coming academic year. It completely toys with my emotions.
I'm thinking professional housewife is sounding pretty tempting right about now...
It's been one crazy roller coaster. One minute they tell you there are plenty of positions; next they fire 153 teachers due to budget cuts; then they say they'll hire 90 for this coming academic year. It completely toys with my emotions.
I'm thinking professional housewife is sounding pretty tempting right about now...
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
the answer is yes
In regards to the question in the post prior to this one, the answer is yes, procreating must be the new popular pastime.
I just found out someone else I know is pregnant. That makes 8 and apparently we're not done counting.
I just found out someone else I know is pregnant. That makes 8 and apparently we're not done counting.
Is procreating now a popular pastime?
Yesterday Kevin and I found out another person we know is pregnant. Then I realized that there are 7 people we know who are pregnant and due relatively soon. This is truly weird for us because it seems like only yesterday it was strange to be the only married people our age that we know. We used to talk about how it would be weird to be in the age group of people having children. It seemed soooooo far off. Now, all of sudden, we're smack dab in the middle of it! It's like it's the season of procreation and it's infecting everyone we know.
Don't get me wrong. I'm really happy for everyone we know. It's super exciting. It just took me by surprise that we know so many people who are actual friends or at least acquaintences who are going to have babies. Where have I been that I went from being the only married person my age to the only person without a kid?
Crazy.
Don't get me wrong. I'm really happy for everyone we know. It's super exciting. It just took me by surprise that we know so many people who are actual friends or at least acquaintences who are going to have babies. Where have I been that I went from being the only married person my age to the only person without a kid?
Crazy.
Sunday, July 06, 2008
blogging hiatus
So I'm gonna hang my head in shame for ignoring my blog for 2 years - yes, 2 years. No excuses, I'm just lame. But recently some friends shared their blog with me and it re-energized my blogging ambitions.
Hence, let's commence with a quickie update.
Kevin: He pinned on 1st Lieutenant in May and is working with the 2nd AMU in AMXS at Tyndall AFB. He's also taking MBA classes in logistics.
Dogs: Ruby has a torn ACL but she's still running around eating boxes and loving life. Bobo's mega-esophagus is doing a little better and he's not barfing as much because Kevin built him a dog high chair. For real.
Me: I'm teaching summer camp at the local Junior Museum and casually job searching for new prospects for the fall. The teaching thing is still a goal, but seeing as how the district had to cut $20 million from their budget, the job front in that career field isn't looking too promising at the moment. Other than that, I'm tutoring a girl in reading and taking swimming lessons and hanging out with my fave Panama City people.
So there's our life in a nutshell. I will I will I will update this regularly from now on.
Hence, let's commence with a quickie update.
Kevin: He pinned on 1st Lieutenant in May and is working with the 2nd AMU in AMXS at Tyndall AFB. He's also taking MBA classes in logistics.
Dogs: Ruby has a torn ACL but she's still running around eating boxes and loving life. Bobo's mega-esophagus is doing a little better and he's not barfing as much because Kevin built him a dog high chair. For real.
Me: I'm teaching summer camp at the local Junior Museum and casually job searching for new prospects for the fall. The teaching thing is still a goal, but seeing as how the district had to cut $20 million from their budget, the job front in that career field isn't looking too promising at the moment. Other than that, I'm tutoring a girl in reading and taking swimming lessons and hanging out with my fave Panama City people.
So there's our life in a nutshell. I will I will I will update this regularly from now on.
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