This Time Last Year: February 2009

These days I’m eating, sleeping and breathing doctoral applications.  Which are not necessarily all that interesting to talk about, although I’ve done my fair share of complaining via Twitter and Facebook.  Not the least of which, might I add, included my saga of procuring my high school transcript.  From Renton, Washington.  And only using cash or checks for the transcript fee.  Extremely convenient when you live overseas.  Anyway.  Instead of having to mail cash in an envelope across an ocean and a continent, I was lucky that Mom drove to my old high school, forked over the cash and picked up the transcripts before my brother scanned them into a pdf file for me (thanks Mom! thanks Chad!). Please don’t get me started on the fact that even though I’m 32 and have a Master’s degree and a decade of professional experience, I still needed to prove that I got an A in Pacific Northwest History when I was 14.

See?  This is my life right now. Boring.  Maybe we should talk about what I was doing this time last year?  Namely, lots of reading and lots of running, both of which I aspire to do this February too.  Especially the running part, since I’ve signed up for the same half-marathon that I ran last year.  I plan on keeping myself accountable with you guys on my training, which starts technically now. But have you seen all the snow and ice out there?

Sorry, can’t seem to stop the whining these days. Please stick around though! I promise things will be looking up in a couple weeks. Until then, here’s February 2009:

Lausanne: I was charmed by this Swiss city, by its sloping rooftops, jumble of beautiful old buildings, snowy hillsides and its French-speaking people…

A Story of Race and Inheritance: I have attempted to read books written by politicians before, usually without much success…

Creamy Lentils with Potatoes: Awhile back I bought myself some German cookbooks.  Although I regularly read wonderful food blogs in English (e.g, Everbody Likes Sandwiches and Pinch my Salt)…

Sprechen Sie English: One of the “perks” of being the only native English speaker at work is that I am often approached by colleagues to double-check their written English for research abstracts or articles.* Although it sounds like a pain, I actually kind of like it…

Week One: My training for the Hannover Half-Marathon on May 3rd officially started this week.  I like to use Hal Higdon’s training plans as a guide for creating my own, especially since you can choose your own level of intensity…

A Mercy: It has been a long while since I have read anything by Toni Morrison (i.e., Song of Solomon, read during my freshman year of college, deserves a rereading, as I am sure my 31-year-old self would have much more to say about it than my 18-year-old self)…

Week Two: I would say that my second week of training was much more successful than my first.  I hit just about all my goals for the week, including some speed training on Thursday evening (during a snowstorm, no less) which kicked my butt more than I thought it would (which is the point, I guess)…

Still Not Over You: This past summer, I was super excited to start my new life in Germany.  Even so, it was really hard for me to leave New York City (this song by R.E.M. still brings tears to my eyes)…

Five Senses Friday no. 18

Looking through my latests posts, seems I’ve been prone to list making and bullet points lately, rather than full-on prose.  That’s just the way life is rolling right now, and there may be more of that to come — at least until mid-February, after two out of my three major deadlines have past.  But we like lists, don’t we?

Seeing:
* the State of the Union Address, albeit a day later via the NY Times’ interactive video and transcript feature.  Not quite the same as watching it real time, but when real time means 3am, I’ll take what I can get.

Hearing:
* tax talk among other Americans in Hamburg. It’s amazing how little people know about their tax responsibilities while living in another country.

Tasting:
* Lamb Souvlaki with a Tzatziki-covered baked potato.

Feeling:
* wool sweaters against my skin.

Smelling:
* laundry that takes forever to dry indoors during the winter time.

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You might also be interested in reading:

Five Senses Friday @ abby try again

or

Five Senses Friday no. 4 (August 7, 2009)
Five Senses Friday no. 5 (August 14, 2009)
Five Senses Friday no. 6 (August 28, 2009)

List no. 3: Organizations I support

I don’t have a lot of extra money floating around, so when I choose to donate to an organization, I choose carefully.   Usually my donation is a gift to honor someone for their birthday, for Christmas, or in their memory.  There has been plenty said already about what the best donation strategies are — especially in times of international disaster — and my intent with this post is not to share my own donation manifesto.  Rather to give you a sneak peak at the causes and organizations that are closest to my heart:

  1. Lifelong AIDS Alliance
  2. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières
  3. Partners in Health
  4. Global Giving
  5. PreventionWorks!
  6. Sierra Club
  7. Allan Rosenfield Fund, Mailman School of Public Health
  8. WNYC, National Public Radio
  9. UNICEF

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You might also be interested in reading:

List no. 1: Things I miss about being a kid (January 14, 2010)
List no. 2: Things that scare me (January 20, 2010)

OWP: Create

One Word Project: Create

It has certainly been awhile since I’ve joined in on the One Word Project over at Shutter Sisters.   Even though words are failing me and life is overwhelming me, one word seems doable, and the word for January is create:

1. to cause to come into being, as something unique that would not naturally evolve or that is not made by ordinary processes. 2. to evolve from one’s own thought or imagination, as a work of art or an invention.

And don’t you love how beautiful this creation is?  Made for me by my incredibly talented sister, who can somehow manage to take care of a 3 year-old and 2 month-old while letting her creative juices flow.  I am so looking forward to taking this little purse out on the town!

owp-official-button-ss-for-readers

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You might also enjoy reading:

One Word Project @ Shutter Sisters

or

OWP: Sharing the Sun (May 14, 2009)
OWP: Hope (April 25, 2009)