Sunday, April 28, 2013

All Good Things Reprise: Episode 9



1. Watching old Disney movies with friends and knowing all the words! Mulan specifically :) There's nothing like Disney movies to bring back some of my childlike enthusiasm!

2. Sleeping with the windows open. I love drifting off to sleep listening to the wind in the trees and watching the curtain blow in and out.

3. Grandparents! (We haven't had this on here yet which surprises me!) Luke and I have spent some time with my grandparents and his grandma in the last couple weeks. I leave feeling rejuvenated! They have such amazing words of wisdom to share and such funny stories!

4. Spring cleaning! I've been doing a little at a time, and it makes me feel so accomplished.

5. Birthdays! It's been a few weeks of intensive birthdays lately. My exchange sister was 18 last week; my baby sister just turned 17! And Thursday night was my roommate's birthday. Happy birthday everyone!

6. Friends With Benefits. My latest favorite movie. Also the source of my recently kindled love for Justin Timberlake, about a decade and a half late. But better late than never, right?

7. Good food! Especially when it is cooked with love and shared freely.

8. Young people. I know, I know -- I am a young person. But I just chaperoned a retreat for my family's church youth group and seriously, no matter how much I complain ahead of time about sacrificing my weekends for this stuff, it doesn't take long for me to remember why I do it: these kids are AMAZING. Especially having met some teenagers lately that make me worry a little about our regard for each other as human beings, the teenagers I get to know on these trips restore my faith in humanity. These guys are so smart, kind, funny, good-natured... A pleasure to work with, and a pleasure for everyone we come across.

9. Phone calls from people I haven't heard from in awhile, but still think about all. the. time.

10. Family. I can't say this enough. With everything that has been happening lately, I've been appreciating family with a depth that shakes the very foundations of my world. Also, I'm extending the definition of family beyond my nuclear family, beyond my blood relations, even, to the friends that have been absorbed into my family and the families of some friends. We get by with a little help from our friends and famblies.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

even in the pictures

Dear readers, let this second week of placeholder posting not mislead you: I have not run out of things to write about and ponder; in fact, there is far too much going on. The post I had planned for this week was called "disruption & rebound" and it was about the latest series of interruptions to my routine, and how life is unpredictable and throws an impeccable and always unexpected curve ball. Think Trouble With The Curve, (spoiler alert) the guy Amy Adams discovers at the end. Incidentally, this is one of my favorite new movies I've watched this year so far.

I must also assure you that the unruliness of the world and the perpetual excess of invitations and opportunities is not making a permanent dent in my Wednesday afternoon blogging routine.

Let me explain. This placeholder post is dedicated to Mommom Sarah, and to her family, who have enriched my time in Delaware beyond all imagination.

Mommom Sarah is J's grandmother and she passed away last week. She was beautiful and sassy and charming. Funny, sharp as a whip. She was tiny, which is funny because she was the mother of four boys and she was always dwarfed by the men surrounding her -- but only in physical stature. In character, she holds her own. Even in the pictures.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

All Good Things Reprise: Episode 8

Weeks like this make All Good Things a little tougher to write. But weeks like this are also why we need to look for good things in the first place. This world is not always pretty, not always easy. It is sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes devastating. It is very often difficult. All we can do is experience everything. But in the end, it's up to us to find and enjoy the beautiful parts of this collective story. And it's also up to All Good Things to find the beautiful parts of the story! So turn on the tunes, sit back, and make the most of this week's list. :)

Due to some technical difficulties and the collected chaos of this particular week, you can find the playlist here this week instead of in its usual format: http://m.youtube.com/#/playlist?list=PLXyIa8VIOAKcmoI_Wq1J9TjFwKKPbfsdx

1. The way people rise to the occasion of showing goodness amidst life's tragedies. I don't want to minimize the pain that has come as a result of Monday's bombings, and in the wake of it, but the general attitude of looking for a silver lining, or a positive takeaway, struck and heartened me. I'm sure you've seen that Mr. Rogers quote about the helpers rushing to the scene to take care of the victims; I wanted to post it here but I couldn't find the image in time to post.

2. NPR's latest blog, Codeswitch: News on the Frontiers of Race, Culture and Ethnicity. This was a total #nerdgasm on Monday morning, since codeswitching was my favorite unit in sociolinguistics. But it's still relevant to the non-sociologists out there, because it is ever-present in our day-to-day interactions.

3. The 80s: The Decade That Made Us. Also heard on NPR on Monday morning, a NatGeo TV documentary that is right up the AGT alley, if you happened to have noticed our musical taste...

4. Thursday was National High Five Day. This is great in itself, but it's cool that this year it's supporting the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings. The cherry on top was an electronic sign in front of WSFS, Delaware's "community bank," reading: FREE HIGH FIVES. Brought a smile to my face.

5. NPR Weekend Edition. I mostly like it all the time, but the weekend shows always make me happy: Car Talk, Radio Lab, On Being, This American Life, American Roots, and of course Prairie Home Companion!

6. Baby showers! I went to one this afternoon and the cuteness was uncontainable. Also, there is something uplifting in celebrating new life, something which is particularly striking given the events of this week.

7. More generally-- lately some friends/family of mine have been making some big plans for the future including having babies, getting engaged, and getting into grad school. It's so nice to share these experiences with them!

8. I bought a new pair of tennis shoes this week because my old ones are legitimately falling apart (pieces of my shoes would fall out when I took my feet out). It made me think about how important it is to spend some time/money on yourself sometimes.

9. Cribbage. Luke and I are playing together a lot lately and having a great time!

10. Coming home to loved ones after a long day. After hearing about the bombs in Boston and the explosion in Texas I feel so fortunate to come home to Luke everyday. (Same goes for Jason and my family. I appreciate the people I love so, SO much.)

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

carpe diem!

The NCC library computer system is down today. I had a post planned, but since it was about facing our mortality and fear and love, I think I'm going to take the gorgeous afternoon as an invitation to take a hiatus from blogging this week. Posting this photo and a brief message from my phone:

Do something you want to do! Get out from in front of your computer and find something to enjoy! Give yourself a few minutes or hours of a mini-cation. I'm giving you permission. In fact, I'm encouraging you. In fact, I'm passing on a message from the universe.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

All Good Things Reprise: Episode 7

It's been quite a week, full of strange weather phenomena (see #2 and #6) and other surprises. Good things are what get us through the weeks -- even in the longest, most tiring, most turbulent weeks there are usually 10 things that are not so bad. So hunker down, hit play, and read on for the good in this week.


1. Afternoon naps. I got up early this weekend and have enjoyed some relaxing and lazy afternoons!

2. It had been snowing here for like the last 10 days, but I've been reminding myself that it can't last forever! Spring has to be on it's way to MN eventually, right? And it helps to think how much the vegetation will love the snow once it melts :)

3. Rekindling an old friendship. My friend from high school and I got together this week and made a plan to message some of our old high school friends to see if they want to get together. It would be great to see how everyone has changed and stayed the same.

4. Guacamole from Chipotle. I mean, I don't know what they do to it, but it's amazing.

#5: found in the conservatory at longwood gardens
5. The flower to the right. It is so delicate and it smells lovely. I was struck by how these blooms start out as tiny, hard little red buds, grow to bigger red-tinged white balls, which then explode into full, fluffy-looking flower. Incredible.

6. Enjoying time outside! Unlike Minnesota, Delaware is barreling its haphazard way into spring. I'm gradually reinfusing my skin with the vitamin D it has been so desperately missing these past few months... The sun is just beautiful.

7. We got a new toilet this week! It used to require some serious plunging every other flush or so, in a good week... But our landlord came and replaced it yesterday and so far it is smooth sailing! (For those of you who have fully functioning toilets, this is a reminder to NEVER TAKE IT FOR GRANTED! And also, take good care of it now so it doesn't come back to haunt you later... Somewhat literally.)

8. HIMYM, better known as How I Met Your Mother. Possibly the best show ever created. Like real life... but funnier, maybe because we're watching other people living it, or maybe because those "other people" happen to be an all-star comedy cast. (Just for the record, I'm not caught up; my preferred method of watching television is in a series of marathon sessions, some time after it was first aired.)

9. Family. Absolutely cannot tell you enough how much family means to me, and how important it is to have a solid family around each other when the going gets rough.

10. The following photo was sent to me via text message today from a college friend visiting New York this week for dance:

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

a conversation about the weather

Conversations about the weather have a bad rap.

Related conversations with a bad rap include: "How 'bout them Yankees?" which I will never be able to replace in my mind no matter how irrelevant it is in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Delaware, Ohio, or any other place I've lived or -ites I've lived among. There will be no "How 'bout them Twins?" or "Go Packs!" or "Da Bears!" for me, no sirree. Not that any of these openers would really whip me into a verbal frenzy. I can't really carry a conversation about sports.

But I can talk about the weather for quite some time. When I was a hall receptionist back at St. Olaf, our collegiate habitat formed the basis for my conversations with most passersby: "Little cold?" "Is it nice out? I might go lay out in the Quad later."

Now, as a young adult (new adult?), it still provides fodder for conversation, even with people I see and talk to on a daily basis and people I have a deeper relationship with. And as it turns out, the weather is actually central to a lot of facets of my life as a young adult. Thus its rampant appearances in small talk, and its centrality in conversation in general. Observe.

***

For the past few days in Delaware we've had temperatures in the mid-80s. That's right. I remember last week leaving for work in 29-degree weather. To me this kind of weather turnaround is somewhat alarming, but according to my Maryland-native coworker this is normal in these parts.

When I ran those 4 miles on Saturday morning, it was probably around 40° when we started running and maybe had reached 50° by the end; yesterday, I did about 3.5 miles around the Newark Reservoir after work at 85° and I will tell you that I felt the difference. It worries me a little to think about the Spartan race in July... But as Jason constantly reminds me, "The mud will help!" I sure hope so! 5 miles in the heat of summer sounds pretty daunting right about now.

Meanwhile, while I'm stealing moments to slip out of my sweater at work, my friends and relatives in Minnesota are wading through several inches of snow. Typical. A friend of mine who now lives in D.C. posted on Facebook this morning: "My facebook feed is alternating pictures of snow in MN and cherry blossoms in DC. Glad I am on the warmer side of things." Hear, hear.

Still, I can't help wondering if these strange weather events have been happening throughout my lifetime or if they are happening more and more as I get older; and if it is the latter, I can't help but worry a little that climate change is happening a lot faster than they told me it would when I learned about it in science class back in fifth grade. I swear I remember having gorgeous spring days, weeks on end, in fact, in March, right in between winter and summer. Am I hallucinating? At this rate, I predict that by the time I have kids, hurricanes will be hitting the eastern seaboard, as far north as Nova Scotia, every fall; most of the U.S. won't get any snow until about March, when we will all get dumped on -- repeatedly; most waterfront towns (rivers and oceans, mostly, but potentially also lakes) will have been chased to higher ground; and Manhattan will be underwater. Not quite The Day After Tomorrow; maybe more like The Decade After This One. Or The Year After Next.

On a personal level, the greatest immediate effect of the sudden weather change is on my mood. I am much, much happier lately. I can attribute this state of mind to a few factors, but I know for a fact a lot of it has to do with the amount of sunshine I have seen in the past few weeks, and the amount of fresh air I breathe on our lunchtime walks at work. Seasonal affect disorder has been on my list of things to blog about for a few weeks now, and now that I feel more steady on my proverbial feet I would like to make a resolution, my readers as witness: next year I will find a way to keep the cold and the shortness of the days from affecting the people around me. I can get through the winter, because I am aware of what's happening throughout the dark months, and I can see the light at the end of the tunnel; but it upset me this year how much my cold, dark mood affected my interpersonal relationships. So my resolution for next winter is to raise my mood for the sake of the people I love.

So I am in a much better mood now, but I know the heat gets a lot less fun when summer really gets rolling. For a few reasons.

You remember that summer in St. Croix Falls and the naked days at Sunny V? Well, my house in Wilmington also isn't the most optimal as far as temperature goes. Lots of cracks and drafts. Poorly ventilated. Incredibly inefficient at holding or circulating any ideal temperature. (This also means that the weather has a pretty substantial impact on my utility bill. Now tell me the weather has no impact on our lives.) And, because of the cats, we keep all the doors closed in the house, which cuts off the air circulation even more. My room was already stifling this morning after 3 days of heat. I'm debating whether it would be worse to not be able to breathe when I'm sleeping because of the heat, or because my respiratory tract is full of cat hair. The answer still isn't clear.

And neither are my bronchioles.

Speaking of naked days, I have already realized that my professional wardrobe is not hot weather-optimized. I have about two dresses that are appropriate for work, and one of them is black and has 3/4 sleeves. The other one requires me to wear a sweater, and I wore that yesterday. I'm now stretching my remaining sundresses to their professional limit, by covering them up with sweaters and blazers, and wearing camis underneath them, and wearing flats to make it look like there is less leg sticking out the bottom. This is not sustainable. There is also the dilemma presented by air conditioning, and the fact that I will no doubt contract hypothermia at some point this summer, since there is a vent right under my desk and certain decision makers like to keep the office at least 30 degrees in the opposite direction from the outside temperature. SO, do I dress for the weather outside and freeze to death during the day? Or do I die of heat stroke on my way to and from work and then achieve some semblance of comfort while I work.

There is no end to heat-related dilemmas in my life.

Arguably the most serious of heat-related dilemmas was brought up at a neighborhood association meeting I attended the other night: crime. A few of our local legislators spoke at the meeting and warned us of the correlation between poverty and crime; and I know there is also a strong direct correlation between ice cream sales and crime -- sorry, heat and crime. So if poverty is rising, and the mercury is rising, then crime is likely to rise as well. I'm expecting this to affect me on some level, since I live in the city, just a block off the "bad part of town."

***

Now that I've graced all of your web browsers with some solid weather-related conversation topics, I'd better go soak up what is left of this lovely warm day. For my readers in climes not yet in the throes of spring/summer, I'll enjoy it for you ;)

Thursday, April 4, 2013

All Good Things Reprise: Episode 6

And here we are at Sunday night again. It's been an increasingly gorgeous week here in Wilmington, and I'm beginning to feel the sunshine seeping back into my pores.

Cassie and I are still just contributing our sections, but I'm going to start laying them out without introduction of who contributed which numbers. All good things for everyone! Hit play and...enjoy!



1. Saw a bird carrying a twig in its beak while it flew across the road one morning this week, and was suddenly struck by the strange and amazing things that make up our life on earth. How pretty the other birds' singing was; the routine of this bird building a nest every spring; the fact that this bird can fly over the street with a piece of a tree in its beak. Just the fact that this is even possible.

2. As I was walking out to my car after BodyCombat this week I heard out of the dark a little voice shouting, "I LOVE YOU!" And then I saw the new guy in BodyCombat putting a little blond pigtailed girl into her car seat and saying, "I love you too." So beautiful.

3. There have been a couple of beautiful days this week. It finally feels like spring is coming! My backyard is full of bright green leaves -- granted, they are all weeds... But it still looks lush! And this whole week in Delaware it's supposed to be in the mid to upper 70s!

4. On Saturday my sister, my roommate and I got up and ran 4 miles for the Pearce Q Foundation, to benefit kids with cancer. It was a little cold, but so refreshing... And Katy and I came in at a little over 38 minutes! That's better than we had anticipated, and with decidedly negative splits. This is the first of 3 races we're running this season. Look for more in the next few months.

5. After the run, I took my sister out for brunch at Newport Restaurant, home of the most delicious sweet potato hotcakes in town. Love her. She loves whipped cream on everything. Photo included.

6. Long walks. I went on a few around the lake in my neighborhood and felt refreshed! Also, I like the smell of "outside" that lingers on clothes when I return home.

This is on my list too! I just got back from a walk along the Riverfront in Wilmington in the day's last rays of sunshine... Discovering a part of the city I previously have little explored, and finishing with my first summer ale of the season! Plus, Jason makes good company.

7. She's the Man! (Movie with Amanda Bynes) it was on this morning, and I was saying all the lines word-for-word.

8. Seeing my family at holiday gatherings. I got to see my little cousin, Emily, who told me, "red jelly beans are icky because they taste like cough syrup." Also her younger brother, Luke, who thinks it's hysterical that he and my Luke have the same name :)

Another samesies! Today we celebrated Jason's grandmother's birthday -- she has four sons, so not only was the food predictably fantastic, but there was plenty of goofy humor and fond ribbing going on. I'm a big fan of dad jokes.

9. Rainy days! I love love love the cloudy, rainy spring days that are headed our way.

10. Planning a vacation. Luke and I are planning our honeymoon and it's so fun to plan where we're going, how to get there, where to stay, and what to bring!

Until next week... Keep your eye out for good things in your world! And as always, feel free to share.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

children of children: having parents with aging parents

I found out this weekend that there is a new genre in fiction: New Adult, which falls "after" YA in the literature spectrum but "before" adult fiction. To be honest, I didn't really know that YA had an official age bracket; in my mind YA meant "interesting" and adult fiction was code for "slow paced and trying too hard to be mature." (Forgive my sweeping generalizations. When it comes down to it I divide by books I like and dislike, and the genre is really a nonissue.) It turns out, though, that Young Adult fiction officially targets high school-aged teens, and it's actually required that the protagonist is between 13 and 17 years of age. New Adult fiction, though, is for young adults in the 18-21 age bracket.

I feel sort of left out by this arbitrary distinction, because I would consider myself a young adult; a new adult, if you insist; not quite a full-blown adult, not yet. Not because my responsibilities and concerns aren't full-blown adult concerns (i.e. rent, food, work, paying my bills, healthcare), but because I think there is a distinct set of issues that adults in my stage of life face. Some of these are generational, and some of them just affect twenty-somethings -- which I suppose could be an age category, but it has always sounded frivolous to me. I guess no label for my peers and I would satisfy me; we all know of my hearty distaste for limiting categories.

Besides, to be fair, even within my immediate friend group there exists a mindblowingly broad spectrum of issues we deal with on a day-to-day basis. Some of my friends are married and some are planning weddings; some of them are having babies and some of them have a kid or two already. Some of us are still on the fence about the whole dating thing to begin with. Some of us are focused on our careers, and some still funneling our energy into education, and some into service. Some of us are just trying to keep our heads above water.

Actually, that last point seems like the most widely applicable shared issue of my personal peer group. We're all just trying to figure out what it means to get by, and then how exactly to achieve that.

Note: Upon further research -- Wikipedia says new-adult fiction covers the "coming-of-age that also happens in a young person's twenties." Target market: 18-30. I'm more accepting of this category now, but still... 18 was a few years ago and I hardly even recognize it anymore.

So this is my guiding star for the blog and how I choose the baby steps I blog about: issues we face as twenty-somethings, and how we navigate them. Many of these issues are very personal, and I struggle to balance the very real considerations of privacy and particularly the privacy of others with my heartfelt belief that secretism and shame and reluctance to talk about the tough stuff is a huge driving problem in our society -- a root cause of mental illness, domestic and foreign political issues, crumbling personal relationships, institutionalized inequalities, and just general personal and societal instability. So, even though my parents and grandparents are some of my most dedicated blog followers, I try to be real on here about things I'm dealing with, whether I worry about what they might be thinking or not.

Speaking of grandparents, and age categorizations, I have been thinking a lot lately about a strange situation that I feel gets very little airtime. Having aging parents is something that people write articles and even books about. It's a gigantic gold mine for advertisers and marketers, and something a lot of people can relate to -- particularly because it's the Baby Boomers who make up The Aging these days.

But what's strange for me right now is having parents with aging parents. The combination of negotiating and navigating adulthood for myself while watching my parents and my friends' parents negotiating and navigating the aging of their parents makes for some pretty serious musing on my part.

One thing we commonly accept as difficult about thinking about old age is that it forces us to face our mortality. I know for a fact that my grandparents (and adopted grandparents, C&S) think about this pretty regularly. I know some of them are more graceful about coping with this uncomfortable truth. It's uncomfortable for our parents, too, when they still have jobs and routines and children who depend on them for food and shelter and education, to think about preparing for the inevitable end, and what happens after. And to think about this for their own parents, who may not still provide a basic livelihood for them, but who did for a good and important chunk of their lives, and who continue to be emotionally intrinsic throughout their lives. And, obviously, there is love that makes things very complicated.

So, now, our parents are having to face a series of odd decisions, like whether their parents are still capable of living on their own safely and comfortably; and if not, then where do they go? Into a "home"? Into our parents' homes? And how do we pay for all that? What about medical care? (We all know how I feel about the healthcare system in the first place; and when making medical decisions for someone else these things get even more complicated, particularly when the person you're making decisions for has always been considered perfectly capable of making those decisions for him- or herself...) And then there is the whole issue of estate, and what the house and unused furniture and other possessions should be used for, or if they should be sold; and tied up in that is what has been promised to the children, and how that will be divvied up.

And underlying all these questions and the others I have not addressed are the lifelong familial tensions and the roles everyone has always played in the family dynamic; plus the questions of personhood which is what makes most issues an issue in the first place: at what point can a person make a decision that directly affects the life of another person? At what point are we incapacitated to the point of losing a say in our own affairs? And then, who is qualified to make those decisions, and who has the final say? Especially, in this case, when there are multiple siblings. Imagine how the situation is magnified each time you add another voice and another family member, with their own worries and values, into the mix.

And what about if they are grieving, too? What if they are struggling to retain control of their own lives and their own selves and feeling it slowly slipping from their grip? They feel less sharp mentally and physically than they used to; they are forced to give up things they are passionate about and have given their lives meaning; they have already attended the funerals of siblings and friends and other contemporaries; they are waiting for dementia to set in, or insomnia, or incontinence -- for the dreaded ills and "second childhood," as we've heard it called.

So, these are the conversations happening among our parents' generation. How does this affect us?

It has been strange watching my parents and grandparents facing old age. Perhaps because of my relative lack of life experience and logistical and emotional involvement in the situation, the answers seem clear to me. I have read Tuesdays With Morrie and the Living Will and I have thought about these things; I have thought about what would happen if (knock on wood) something happened to my parents, what decisions and responsibilities I would be left with. I know my parents pretty well and I can guess what they would say to someone else faced with a similar situation. But I also understand how critical are the nuances that make this situation different from that; I understand, on a removed intellectual level, how emotionally complex these situations are. I know how fuzzy and heavy my mind feels when I am grieving -- or even just stressed.

So I am anticipating making these or similar decisions for my parents, imagining how my siblings and I will handle things, hoping fervently that the bonds I think so strongly bond us together will hold true when we are called upon to act. I'm picking out the traits my parents share with their parents, in what ways they will be similar and different... And in what ways I am similar and different from them. How I say I would handle a question they are faced with, but how that might not be how I would realistically handle it or how I will handle it when the question arises in front of me. What is my ideal model for dealing with an aging parent, and what factors will complicate that by the time it comes up for me. How can we kick the unhealthy patterns and replace them with ones that will work better? And how will I deal with the fact that, despite all my awareness and thought and premeditation, my decades of analysis can only do me so much good when it comes down to crunch time?

I know I'm being vague, but I also know that my family is not the only family looking at this situation. I know some of my friends are watching their own parents' families navigating this strange geriatric territory, and some of my friends are even thinking about navigating it themselves. I know it makes me feel old and very young at the same time, but the important thing is that it makes me think about the big picture of my own life and my life in community and the other lives in my communities. This is something, I believe, that makes us human and it's important that we not brush over it or try to avoid it. I'm taking notes. We'll see if they come in handy when my time comes.