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i am a dreamer, an idealist, a creator, an introvert, a thinker, and an all-around neat person...if i do say so myself.

24 December 2009

Currer Bell

It is in vain to say human beings ought to be satisfied with tranquility: they must have action; and they will make it if they cannot find it. Millions are condemned to a stiller doom than mine, and millions are in silent revolt against their lot. Nobody knows how many rebellions besides political rebellions ferment in the masses of life which people the earth. Women are supposed to be very calm generally: but women feel just as men feel; they need exercise for their faculties and a field for their efforts as much as their brothers do; they suffer from too rigid a restraint, too absolute a stagnation, precisely as men would suffer; and it is narrow-minded in their more privileged fellow-creatures to say that they ought to confine themselves to making puddings and knitting stockings, to playing on the piano and embroidering bags. It is thoughtless to condemn them, or laugh at them, if they seek to do more or learn more than custom has pronounced necessary for their sex.

Jane Eyre

30 June 2009

07 June 2009

six months

the past six months have been, well, stressful.

i've said that rule #1 is to never talk about work, but i will say this one thing. in january we got a new boss. she is great and i am learning a lot and i trust her decisions. but a lot of times when a new boss comes in who does things very differently from the last boss, the changeover process leaves a number of casualties in its wake. and there have been a number of casualties. which has made the work environment unpredictable and stressful.
enough about that.

last december i saw the way the housing market was going, and i saw what mortgage rates were, and i decided that it was now or never for me to buy my first house. i fell in love with a 100 year old adobe brick craftsman style house on the Wood streets in riverside. and it was in my price range! and that was the beginning of my six month housing saga in which i learned about the criteria for an FHA loan (the house can't be in need of any renovations or structural improvements, which left my dream house in my dreams) and that dealing with banks for a forclosed home is the biggest pain in the ass in the entire world. i made an offer on a 6 year old home in downtown riverside on january 19th of this year, and sparing all the boring details, i finally closed escrow almost six months later. as of this last friday, i am officially a homeowner! and since my 33rd birthday was this last thursday, i'm calling it my birthday present to me.

i would be more excited, except this all finished up 3 days before my departure for Ukraine. i won't be able to move until i get back. so it doesn't even feel like a reality yet.

so right now all the excitement is that after six months of training and waiting, my team is leaving for Ukraine tomorrow morning! we are all SO excited. we're spending the next three weeks at an orphanage, and we'll be spending that time playing games and singing songs and doing crafts and possibly doing skits. your basic summer camp stuff. but in Ukraine. all my bags are packed and sitting by the door, and i'm just waiting. waiting. waiting. i'm not the world's most patient person, so all this waiting is not easy. i'm ready to go NOW.

i'm not sure how much internet access i will get while we're there, but if there are any updates you can read them here.

see you all in july!

06 May 2009

silence is...

i knew that i hadn't blogged in a while, but i was a little shocked to realize that it has been almost two months.

its not like there hasn't been anything happening.
actually, a LOT has been happening. but i either didn't feel like talking about it or i couldn't.

a lot has been happening at work. things have been busy and stressful. but rule #1 around my blog is never write about work. EVER. so moving on...
preparing for my upcoming trip to Ukraine has taken a great deal of my time and energy. but its not really anything to talk about here.
i moved a couple weeks ago. but its nothing i really want to talk about. i'm currently camping out in my parents' guest room with everything i own in a pile in their garage. the most descriptive word i can think of to use is demoralizing.
i haven't even been baking. i know, weird, right?

the only thing i even really wanted to talk about was something that i was keeping under my hat until i knew it was actually going to happen. i was beginning to think that this day would never come, but i bought a house. and if everything stays on schedule it should officially be mine in a little over a week. i am so excited. and completely terrified. its a lot of money. and i own zero furniture. no couch. no bed. no table and chairs. no fridge. no washer and dryer. i don't even own silverware or pots and pans. and that all takes money. i know it will all work out and i will thoroughly enjoy finally having my own place. but i'm feeling a little overwhelmed by it all.

well, i guess that's all for now.

12 March 2009

convicted

an excerpt from an article called America's Shame by Peter Singer in the March 13th issue of The Chronicle Review:

The World Bank defines extreme poverty as not having enough income to meet the most basic human needs for adequate food, water, shelter, clothing, sanitation, health care, or education. One widely quoted statistic is tht a billion people are living on less than one U.S. dollar per day. That was the World Bank's poverty line until 2008, when better data led to a new poverty line of $1.25 per day. As a result, the number of people whose income puts them under the new poverty line is 1.4 billion.
On hearing the "$1.25 a day" figure, the thought may cross your mind that in many developing countries it is possible to live much more cheaply than in industrialized nations. But the World Bank has already made that adjustment in purchasing power, so those it classifies as living in extreme poverty are existing on a daily total consumption of goods and services - whether earned or homegrown - comparable to the amount of goods and services that can be bought in the United States for $1.25.
The 1.4 billion people living in extreme poverty are likely to be hungry for at least a part of every year. Even if they can get enough food to fill their stomachs, they will probably be malnourished because their diet lacks essential nutrients. In children, malnutrition stunts growth and can cause permanent brain damage. The poor may not be able to afford to send their children to school. Even the most basic health-care services are usually beyond their means.
That kind of poverty kills. while life expectancy in rich nations averages 78 years, in the poorest nations - those classified by the United Nations as "least developed" - it is below 50. In rich countries, fewer than one child in 100 dies before the age of 5; in the poorest countries, one in five does. Unicef, the United Nations Children's Fund, estimates that nearly 10 million children under 5 die each year from causes related to poverty. That's 27,000 a day - a football stadium full of young children, dying every day (along with thousands of older children and adults who die from poverty every day as well). Some children die because they don't have enough to eat or clean water to drink. More die from measles, malaria, diarrhea, and pneumonia - diseases that don't exist in developed nations, or if they do, are easily cured and rarely fatal.
the article made many assertions about foreign aid and the obligation of those living in the U.S. to contribute to do something about extreme poverty.
i found it to be extremely convicting.
how can i justify spending over $3 on a cup of coffee when 1.4 billion people around the world don't have enough to eat? how can i say that i need to spend money on another new pair of shoes when 1.4 billion people can hardly clothe themselves?

$1.25 a day.

i think i will look at how i spend my money a little differently now.
i have a feeling it can be used more effectively.

08 March 2009

video

so remember how back in august i said that micah and i had taken a ton of video on our road trip to portland and that i would be shortly posting a final edit of that video?
well, the wait is over!
it only took six months for me to put it all together.
that was mostly because windows based editing programs leave me swearing like a sailor.
i want a mac...


my journey to goodbye from elizabeth herrity on Vimeo.

i hope you like it.
or at least think it doesn't suck.

01 March 2009

reservations


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i enjoyed our group camping trip last october so much that i decided to put together another trip for this year. the plan had been to reserve a spot at Carpinteria State Beach sometime in july. but this last week i learned that you can't just decide in february that you want to go camping someplace that cool as soon as july. yes, it is completely booked 5 months in adavance. but wait, it gets better.
apparently the california state park system releases months to be open for reservation seven months in advance, on the first of that month. so if i wanted to reserve a spot in july, i would have to be on the website at 8 am on january 1st. (well actually the 2nd. they don't make reservations on new year's day.)
so since the next month to be made available was september, i decided to make a reservation at carpinteria for labor day weekend. i was up at 7:45 this morning, on my computer, on the reserveamerica.com website, hoping that my web connection was fast enough to secure me a campsite. i opened up the page for the beach, chose my site and my dates, and hovered over "reserve now" until my clock ticked 8am.
and i was victorious.
i will be camping on labor day weekend.

oh, and every single site at the beach was completely booked for that weekend by 8:09am.

17 January 2009

calling any and all art nerds

what's better than spending a day off work at an art museum?
hmmm?
getting into said museum for free.

this monday LACMA is free for all. so of course i'm going.
even though i hate driving out to LA and finding parking. and the likelihood is quite high for the museum to be ridiculously busy on a free admission day.
i'm still going.
anyone who wants to go with, i'm leaving at 11am-ish.
i promise not to be too art nerdy for you.

14 January 2009

my team

tonight was my first training meeting with the students i'm taking to Ukraine this june.

this is going to be a very good six months.

09 January 2009

r.e.s.p.e.c.t.

i am 32 years old.
i have never felt the need to be embarrassed about my age or refuse to tell someone my age.
i have never wished to be older or younger than i am.

i am what i am.

i love the fact that with age comes wisdom.
i make much better decisions now than i did when i was 22. and i will make even better decisions when i am 42.
but i don't look my age. most people guess 26.
now, most 32 year old women would LOVE to be mistaken for being 6 years younger than they are.

i HATE it.

i've recently been thinking a lot about why i hate it so much when people tell me i look so young or that i am so young.
i've come to the conclusion that it is because i have been through a lot in the past 32 years. and i mean a LOT. most people have no idea the amount of shit that i've been through. i have gathered much experience and wisdom and am proud of the person i have become. and i don't want to be mistaken for being some young, green girl who is still figuring out who they are.

i know who i am.

i am also coming to the conclusion that our society is structured in a way that women who are unmarried without children are subliminally seen as somehow inexperienced or incapable.

i am neither.
and there seems to be nothing i can do about that.

but i see things brewing on the horizon which will take my professional life to a place where people may finally take me seriously and respect me.
i'm looking forward to that.

07 January 2009

good advice

this skit is a few years old, but i saw it posted on another website a few days ago and it made me laugh out loud. so i thought i'd share.

02 January 2009

backyard beautification project, phase 2 - complete

well, it has taken me a while, but i finally completed phase 2 of the ongoing backyard project.
during phase one, i took a bunch of bricks out of the planter i used for my vegetables. so in phase two, i used those bricks to pave over a section of dirt next to the fence. and it sat that way for over a month. until yesterday. i finally bit the bullet and toted my cactus collection from my parents' house to mine and set them up in their new home. all 65 of them. whew.

and as you can tell in this picture, the vegetable garden is doing quite well. we've started eating the lettuce and spinach, and the peas are about to organize a coup and take over the entire backyard. things are coming along quite nicely, i must say.
but we'll see how long it takes for me to finish phase three...



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