Showing posts with label morning person. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morning person. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2013

Fill in the Blank Friday #32

Pretty sure that yesterday's 30 Second Vlog post is my most commented on blog to date!  Thanks, new and old Gentle Readers!!!

I'm already looking forward to next week's vlog!

On to Friday's Blanks!

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1.  When I wake up in the morning, the first thing I do is   stretch and as I'm getting out of bed, I pop my toes against the floor.  

2.  I can hardly wait for   MOVE IN DAY!!!  For so many reasons... but mostly because I'm tired of feeling like I should be packing even though move-in day is far away, but not really since I'm gone for the 1/2 week prior... and what if I need something in the mean time??  Ugggghh, why am I too cheap to hire movers again??  

3.  The quickest way to my heart is   food (chocolate)   because   I'm from the South.  

4.  A little known fact about me is   I have a mild paranoia about mats in the middle of gym floors..  Stemming from when I fractured the growth plate in my left wrist in middle school.

5.  The best part about my job is   it's in America.  

6.  Something I couldn't live without is   colorful stuffs.  All colors make me happy.  

7.  Something useful that I wish I knew how to do is   sew.  


Saturday, December 15, 2012

Relish 8-14

Continuing to link up with Rebecca @ Finding Freedom in the Leaping for her Relish 2012 series!


8 December:
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Whether we want to admit it or not, whether we give in or deny it, whether we listen, honor, & respect it or not, there is simply NO getting around the fact that part of our lives must include resting & replenishing. Try as we might to ignore, suppress, or push past our pause point, it will always be there, just waiting for us to accept it. In a society aimed so strictly at achievement it can be hard to stop long enough to refill our tanks. But when we sojourn on without that necessary fuel we are always treated to the truth of just how vital it is to our joy, our creativity, our attention, and our efforts in all we do. So, this year how well did you allow for resting and replenishing? Where, when and how did you fill up your tank? Can you show us an image of a restful spot that you loved this year?

Considering I had 2 periods of convalescent leave this year, I'd say there was definitely time for R&R.  But beyond convalescent leave, yes there was still time for R&R.  Oddly enough, my most replenishing spot wasn't my resting spot....  This year I started running.  This year I also got a dog.  These things were related. Greyhound are on a schedule and they need at least a little exercise every day, meaning at least a walk around the block once or twice.  I'm a bit more motivated than that.  Phil and I started out walking, then gradually we worked up to walking and jogging some, then we kept working till we were running pretty much a full 2 miles.  Lucky for Phil, this isn't the type of running he's used to, but he trots along beside me like a trooper and comes home to pass out until dinner and after.  For me, I can be having an atrocious day and going on a run clears my head.  Sometimes, anger makes me run faster, which means I have a better/harder workout, which makes me feel even more proud of myself and almost completely eliminates a bad day.

As for my resting spot...  I'd say Teh Cloud.  I can go to bed and snuggle up with Sherpa Derpa (my sherpa blanket) and a few pillows and feel comfortable enough to sleep.  After enough sleep, I'm a nicer person...  which is why I would always take naps during lunch when I was at NMITC for training, you're welcome A/C school classes!!  Teh Cloud is my bed and that is a place that I will spend significant monies on because I spend so much time there.  Only the best sheets, blankets, and mattress for Teh Megan.  I even bought a mattress pad black friday 2012 because Teh Bear was complaining that Teh Cloud was kinda hard.  I didn't disagree, so I fixed it.



9 December:
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The only constant in this life is change. That’s it. Change can come in all forms; some brilliant, some downright painful. We grow each and every time we navigate change, exposing more strength, wisdom, and courage the deeper we let it do it’s work within us. Some change comes as an ending, some as a fresh start to something totally different. What was one new thing that started for you this year? What was one new beginning in your life?

Sometimes, when I pre-answer questions the day before, it makes me giggle.  So since I already said running and Phil... I'll have to come up with something else.  Hrmmmm....  This year I (re)started going back to church.  I was raised going to church every Sunday and fell from that once I hit college.  I tried getting involved in Christian campus organizations and I always felt like I was on the outside.  Like I wasn't "hardcore" enough to be there.  When I was in bootcamp, I used going to mass as an excuse to get away from my division and I participated in the choir so I'd have an excuse to sing.  Worship music is my absolute fave thing to sing... EVARRRRR.  Old hymns, new praise music, Christmas music.. I love it all.  While in training at VA Beach, I didn't go to church.  I always had a reason.  I'd think about it and then it wouldn't fit in my schedule and I didn't care.  In GTMO, I started going back to mass.  The church was across the street and the service was at 9.  It was convenient so I went when I felt like it.  In Bahrain, my work schedule didn't really fit weekly scheduled services and I probably could have made it work, but didn't.  Once I got back to America though, I knew that I needed to find a church and I did.  Granted, I found it due to a search for churches in the local area and by basing my wants in a church on service times... but I stuck with Lexington Park United Methodist Church because the people are welcoming and the church is involved with the community.. and there's a 9:30 praise service that I absolutely love going to.

Which leads me to my new beginning.  I've started working on my relationship with God.  I don't feel like I'll ever be as "hardcore" as some people are.  Maybe its the repressed Catholic in me, maybe I just don't act when the Spirit moves me, either way...  I'll be there swaying and singing as loud as my lung capacity allows and listening to the messages each week because I've decided this is something I should work on.  There's nothing that says I have to, which makes it more rewarding.



10 December:
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Carve some time out for yourself this week. Hire a sitter, enlist your spouse or family for help. Reach out. An hour or the whole afternoon, it’s your choice. When planning your time think about what your soul needs most. Is it comfort? Lock yourself in the bathroom for a bubble bath. Is it release? Take a drive to a quiet spot and scream at your steering wheel. Whatever it is you are most needing your highest self already knows, so take this time to do it. Afterwards, write about what creating that space meant for you. What emotions bubbled up? Where did your thoughts drift? Could you commit do doing this for you more often?

I don't really have a need for a sitter and since I live alone, this one was a fairly easy challenge.  When I sat down and thought of something I'd really like to do, my answer was easy.  I wanted to clean my apartment.  I don't like it when my place is messy.  When things aren't in their proper place, I know my stress levels are higher.  When I see stuff piling up on my table, I think to myself that those things could be put away in a few seconds.  When I walk in the kitchen and see the rice on the counter that spilled out of the bowl at lunch today, I wonder why I didn't just clean it up then.  Tidying up my space makes my brain feel clean.

So, I went to the kitchen..  where first I started a Honey Apple Cinnamon Pork Loin for the pot luck at work.    Once I was done making a mess, I cleaned.  I put away the clean dishes and put the dirty ones in the dishwasher.  I wiped off my counters.  I cleaned off my love seat.  I gave Phil a hug.  I then decided to take a break, which is what I'm doing now.

If I had days and days of free time (which I have, but don't often take advantage of in ways that I wish I did, not that I regret doing the things that I do) I'd catch up on blogs, for this blog and Phil's blog.  I'd edit photos and finish vacation posts (which I'm sure Teh Bear thinks are completely irrelevant now).  I'd make a list of all the music that I deleted so Teh Bear can reacquire it for me.  I balance out my budget tracker.  I'd become more involved with 20SB again.  Maybe I'd vlog.  I'd write Teh Bear love letters (because I'm horribly out of practice at that currently).  And before I even got through the first task, I'd be checking FB every few minutes.  I'd be checking my phone wondering if my neighbors are doing anything.  I'd be planning to take Phil out for our daily walk/run.  I'd probably be planning to hang out with my neighbors later in the afternoon/evening.  Being alone used to be very easy, because it was really my only option since I didn't know people, but now that I'm friends with my neighbors, I enjoy hanging out with them...

Wow.. hello tangent.  My bad.



11 December:
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True, for some it may only come as a whisper, but for many the call to be out in nature is nearly impossible to ignore. We are a part of it, as much as it is a part of us, and honoring that desire to commune with the land and its creatures is also honoring all that is still very much wild and untamed within ourselves. When did you answer the call of nature this year? Where did you go and how did you spend your time connecting?

OMG so much nature this year!  Most of this was purposeful.  After my year in Bahrain where I spent as much time inside, out of the sand/dust, as possible, and the prior year in GTMO learning what sweating actually was and that yes, you can sweat there...  Coming back to the United States where the temps were reasonable meant that being outside was going to happen.  For probably the first year ever, I appreciated being outside.  I appreciated leaves on trees.  I appreciated trees.  I appreciated days where the humidity wasn't 110% outside.  I even appreciated this summer when the temps were not 100°F.  Despite living on the beach, I didn't actually go to the beach that much.  I enjoyed my walks in the morning, looking at the beach with Phil, but I'm not a huge fan of sand, so eh.  Since I took up running this year, it kinda filled the void I'd been filling in Bahrain about being outside.  I did outside activities in GTMO, but most were usually water (diving) related.  Running in MD reminds me of being outside in NC.  There are trees and leaves and sometimes a nice wind and shade and blue skies and sometimes grey clouds and rain.  Running in the rain with Phil this summer have probably been my favorite runs of 2012.  Being washed clean.

Also, accepting my desire to be outside made it easier to enjoy my trips to Scotland, Australia, and the Grand Canyon and AZ and NC.  When I was in Scotland, we passed a castle that I really wanted to visit and decided we'd come back to it on our way back.  When we came back, it was raining and the coworker I was with was like, "Well, we don't have to go since it's raining."  I shot back with, "I'm not going to melt because of some rain.. Are you?"  He explained he didn't know if I was a "girly, girl" or not, but that definitely answered his question.  With that, we unloaded our camera stuff, paid the admission, watched a video, I purchased a £7 umbrella, and we headed out to conquer some castle ruins.  The rain ended up stopping soon after we got outside, which was good because it was really hard to handle a camera and an umbrella at the same time.

I feel like I "conquered" nature this year.  I enjoy going out in the rain, I'm not worried about my hair, and I'm only slightly worried about my iPod (if I'm running).  I still don't enjoy the heat or the sweating, but I won't let that stop me from having a good time.  I feel like if I hadn't been accepted this mindset, outside activities like hiking at the Red Rock Amphitheater, planning a hike at the Grand Canyon, hiking the 5 mile trail at Price's Park in Boone, and even going to the Renn Faire (where the dust was unbelievably bad) would have been much less enjoyable.



12 December:
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Just as each new day holds unforeseen promise, so too does the way we greet that new day reveal bits of truth about ourselves. When we greet the morning the same way, day upon day, that routine can evolve into something akin to a ritual; distinctive, private, personal. And year by year the way these rituals grow and change reflects similar shifts going on within us. So, did you have a morning ritual this year? What did it consist of? Whether it stayed the same or changed as the year went on, what meaning do you think it holds?

This year, my morning ritual got switched up in Feb when Phil came home.  Instead of just taking care of my business and going to work, now I had to also take care of Phil.  This meant that I got to see lots of sunrises and see the beach almost every morning.   Usually the get ready ritual just involved getting up, taking a shower, getting ready for work, taking Phil out, feeding Phil, and then heading out.  On mornings there was PT, I'd take care of Phil, go to PT, then come back and take care of my stuff.  After going to Scotland, I started adding breakfast to my ritual.  I started bringing it to work at first, then after Australia (where I got up every morning and made toast), I came home and started making eggs and toast for myself most mornings.  It doesn't actually take that long and now I've pretty much got it timed to a T.  I've also taught myself how to make eggs over medium (which is runny yolk, but NO runny white), which is way harder than you'd expect.

I feel like the addition of the responsibility of Phil and of taking care of myself and eating breakfast are good things.  They show growth.  Also, it shows that I'm a "granny" because when I have to get up early to do these things, I usually go to bed early.



13 December:
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In 2012, when did you feel the most yourself, the most in your skin, the most comfortable, the most YOU? Write about that experience and what it felt like, if you were with others or alone, and why or how you came to feel that comfort in exactly who you are. And if you have a photo from that day/experience, share it with your story.

There was one day in Scotland right before we left that everyone was busy.  It was the one day that I had off that no one else did.  I really didn't want to waste the day, so I ventured out on my own (which apparently we weren't supposed to do, oops).  I went to the Glen Levit distillery, I drove through the Cairngorms and even lot radio signal.  For a while I was just riding in silence, exploring a new place, I really had no idea where I was, but counted on instincts and bad map reading to get me back to Lossiemouth.  It was awesome.  I wasn't scared I wasn't going to make it back, I wasn't worried I was lost, I was just completely absorbed in the adventure.  I was driving down the road (on the "wrong" side of the road and the "wrong" side of the car), going where I was going.  I felt at peace in those moments.  It was just me and the adventure... and the feeling that I could do anything I wanted, which is completely liberating.




14 December:
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It could be out your office window, into your child’s eyes, or from a plane at 35,000 feet. What was your favorite view this year? Can you share a photo of it with us?








That guy is definitely my favorite.  >>
He makes me laugh.
He makes me cry (good tears, mostly).
He makes me look forward to One Day.
He makes me practice my lessons in patience every day.
He gives me kisses.
He gives the best hugs (which has been verified by Miss Reflective).
He puts my fears to rest when they are getting the best of me.
He deals with all my crazy.
He endures plane rides frequently to give me all this in person.
He's the person I think of when I listen to sappy songs.
He makes my big comfy bed even more comfortable and warm.
He fits right in with my crazy family.



PS.  I tried to fix the white boxes and it won't fix so I'm just leaving it.  Sorry it looks crappy.  Tell Blogger to fix their copy/paste code.  :(

Monday, October 29, 2012

Ways my parents scarred me... FOR LIFE.. 3

This scarring is probably more directly related to my DNA inherited and combined personality..

Let me tell you 2 facts about myself that have proven themselves true repeatedly in my life.
1.  I am extremely gullible.
2.  I am easily spooked.

Today, we're going to talk about #2.. what with Halloween coming/being celebrated this past weekend for the most part.

I'm not sure which parent to blame for this spook problem I have.  Neither of my parents ever seemed jumpy to me.  It also wasn't usually a goal in our house to go around trying to scare someone.  Surprise them every once in a while, accidentally come up behind them and not make enough noise to let them know you were there, these things were more acceptable.  But purposely scaring someone just wasn't something that really happened when I was growing up.

I don't generally like scary movies.  Halloween is only a good "holiday" because it involves copious amounts of sugar, chocolate, and other treats.  Dressing up is hard because if you're a woman and don't want to dress up as a "slutty something" it's pretty much impossible to find something at a costume store.  I'm also probably jaded because I don't really live in areas where there are lots of trick-or-treaters.  /sadface.

But this story has nothing to do with Halloween.  This has to do with being scared out of my mind.

Let me preface this with the fact that I have moderately good to very good hearing.  Or maybe I just notice more stuff than others, whatever.  I can tell the difference between people who walk up the stairs at Teh Dad's house, I wake up when I hear Phil stand up to resituate himself during the night, I wake up when it starts raining, I hear when someone puts their hand on a door knob type stuffs.

When I lived with Teh Dad while I was in high school, he used to come in and wake me up/make sure I was awake for school.  Usually, I was pretty good about being aware of my surroundings when Teh Dad would show up, but one morning, things were different.

I slept through his hand hitting the door knob, I slept through his hand turning the door knob.  I slept through his ankle-popping footsteps into my room.  I did not sleep through him breathing, apparently.  I opened my eyes and saw someone standing over me....  and SCREAMED LIKE I WAS DYING.

Teh Dad was unprepared for this reaction.  My scream scared him.  HE YELLED LIKE SOMEONE WAS TRYING TO KILL HIM.

Teh Dad's yell re-scared me and I immediately stopped screaming and started sobbing.

So that would sound something like this:
(high pitched) AHHHHHHHH!!!  (more baritone) AHHHHH!!!!  *Sound of someone starting to sob* (I can't find an accurate word description of the sound)

It would look something like this:

I probably looked like the girl, but had hair like the mom. (image)

Teh Dad's reaction.

My re-reaction.

Teh Dad told me he was going to turn on my lamp.  I sobbed out an acceptance (I don't do lights first thing after waking up because it gives me a headache).  Teh Dad pulled me up in a hug, where I was still sobbing and starting to laugh, which confused him.  He clarified if I was crying or laughing and I manged to tell him both because the situation was funny, even if it was terrifying.  He, too, started to laugh.

This whole process took less than an a minute but it's one of the most memorable minutes of my life.

After a few minutes, I had calmed down and Teh Dad assured himself of my mental stability and we went on with our normal morning programming.


We'll talk about #1 another day maybe.



Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Australia Adventures #12... the final adventure..

We left off at us getting back to the Holiday Inn late and me agreeing to meet up at 6am to go to The Rocks and shoot more photos in the daylight.  I went straight to bed.  I was exhausted.  I had an early start and a long flight the next day.  The guys didn't.

They went exploring without the girls.  They learned (and shared with us later) that our hotel (that I had very meticulously chosen) was a block away from the red light district.  One was propositioned by a male prostitute, another was offered the stage at a place so he could dance for the patrons..  I'm not sure how long they stayed.. but I probably wouldn't have stayed too long.

0530 came early.  After doing some schedule debates in my head, I decided to just get up and shower so that way if we got back late, I wouldn't still need a shower before leaving for the airport.  We left the hotel and headed to the train station, which was right down the street.  We quickly arrived at the Circular Quay stop and jumped off.  After asking for directions a few times (we were in the downtown area again, and I can't tell N/S/E/W directions from just standing on the street, I'm not a compass yo), we finally saw a sign that said The Rocks.


By this point, I was starving.  I was getting "hangry."  My travel cohort said something about a place called "Pancakes on the Rocks" and I was like, PANCAKES?!?!  YESSSSS FEED ME PANCAKES.  I LURVE PANCAKES!!!  Why was I so avid?  Pancakes are pretty much an American thing.  Other countries don't recognize "pancakes".  It's strange.  Just like America doesn't recognize sticky toffee pudding, that's stupid, not strange.  She said they were actual America-like pancakes.  We asked Suzy (my phone's GPS that worked with my portable wifi internet connector) where to go, and she was directing us.






Then I got distracted taking photos.  Really distracted.  Distracted in a "OMG I'm doing this thing that I never thought I'd actually be able to do in my life.  I'd dreamed of it, yes, but never actually anticipated the dream coming true" way.
Good morning harbor bridge.

Good morning opera house.


A chandelier from the Vivid Sydney Festival that we'd missed by a week.
They light up Opera House with multicolored lights and have things like this chandelier just chillin in the harbor.

The ferry pulling into Circular Quay.

I'd been on the top viewing area the night before taking pictures!







Yarrr matey.



I was able to photograph the Sydney Opera House at sunrise.  Seriously.  In real life.  And the Sydney Harbor Bridge.  Ahhhhh-maze-inggggggg!!!!

Actually, we almost missed the sunrise.  We got to the pier area before the sun had risen over the horizon and we'd taken pictures for several minutes and I decided it was time to go eat, so we pulled Suzy back out to resume following her directions.  We had walked up the steps to get back to the street and I turned around and saw the sun starting to peep out over the land.  

Immediately, I turned around and ran down the stairs and back to the pier/ledge where we had been.  I was already running when my travel cohort asked me, "Where are you going?"  "SUNRISE!!!!" was my only response.  She realized what was happening quickly.

After another round of photos, we did actually leave and my cohort joked, "are you sure we're done here?"  I told her not to tempt me.  We finally found Pancakes on the Rocks.



I teased some of my FB friends with pictures of probably the most grand dessert I've ever eaten..  Well, here's the details:

The menu at Pancakes at the Rocks

The specific description of the pancakes I was going to partake of.

What was set on the table for us to eat.  I asked for one of the pancakes to be crepes instead of pancakes, and they were ok with the substitution.  

Pancake reaction:  YUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.

After feeding time, it was time to start heading back to the hotel so we could meet up with the boys and head to the airport via our pre-arranged transportation (vs taking the train/buses again).  The pre-arranged transport actually was about the same cost as the train and much easier, so we were all ok with it.

On the walk back to the train station, there were lots of photos taken.  Morning rush hour was beginning, so there were lots of people out.  No celebrities were spotted.

The original Australian settler family.

Much more awesome than our blue mailboxes.

Apparently, there were lots of animals at the Rocks.
This place sold Ugg boots.

I liked the balcony.

Lub old stuffs.


Motorcycle parking only?



Always thinking of my Canadian peeps.

This dragon was cute.

Guarding the church doors.

This is a real place.  We didn't stop there, but we probably should have.




These street "signs" made me smile since they gave me explicit directions on which way to look for traffic.



Lots o flags.

No outing is complete without a flower shot!

Escalator in the train station

Waiting on the train.

Here it comes!


The morning commuters.  

We made it back to the hotel with enough time for me to take a mini-nap, throw all my stuff back in my suitcase, and get downstairs.  Our driver to the airport was nice.  He was from Turkey, but had come to Australia because his ex-wife wanted to.  Now he was a driver in Australia and was ok with it.

The Sydney airport is probably the scariest place I think I've ever experienced.  We rode a bus across the tarmac.  I'm not actually sure if there was an actual road, but it really just felt like we were riding on the flight line avoiding planes and luggage carriers.  Scariest experience of my life.  We all made it through security (yay red passport and no lines!) and met up at our gate.  Foods were had and hoarded, since our flight was only "20 minutes long."  We took off at 1330 from Sydney and landed at Dallas/Forth Worth, TX at 1350.  Actually, our flight was almost 16 hours long.  In order to ensure no pain for the entire trip, I took a delightful cocktail of drugs (that my travel companion from Perth (and resident medical adviser/corpsman) gave me a stern glare over when I told him what all I'd taken) and slept for probably 15 of the 16 hours.  All of those hours were sitting up, and if you know me, you should know that I don't sleep sitting up unless I'm completely exhausted... or drugged out of my mind.  In good news, I was in practically no pain until we landed.

Once we got to Texas, we were all relieved to have at least made it back to America.  We weren't really pleased about a 4+ hour layover, but we were at least in America.  Our flight to DC was a blink of an eye compared to the flight from Sydney to Dallas.  Our VX-1 duty driver was waiting on us at DCA and despite how much I wanted to sleep the entire ride home, I couldn't because I was so excited to be almost home.

It was well after midnight when I finally got home and crashed into my delightful Cloud.

I'm never more grateful to be home and in my own bed than after travels.  Worldwide travels always make me extra grateful.

And this brings us to the end of the Australian Adventures.  I'm sorry that it took me 2 months to finish this, but in my defense, I've had a lot going on these past few months.  Hopefully, you've enjoyed at least a few photos from my adventures.

**If you really loved a photo, let me know and maybe we can make a business transaction in exchange for a large, potentially framed, print out of your favorite photo?  canIdecideanotherday(at)gmail.com or https://www.facebook.com/canIdecideanotherday



Want to catch up on the Australia Adventures???
1st day off in Australia (summary)
2nd day off in Australia (summary)
San Francisco (photos)
Perth Zoo a, b, c (photos)
The Indian Ocean and downtown Perth at night (photos)
Caversham Wildlife Park a, b, c (photos)
Fremantle Prison (photos)
walking around Fremantle (the city) (photos)
Perth from King's Park (photos)
HMAS Ovens (submarine) (photos)
Sydney at night (photos and a story)
Sydney in the morning (photos and a story)

Grand Finale:
panoramics from the entire Australia trip