Saturday, August 27, 2011

Week 3 Challenge- Dirty Week? Clean It Up!



(Week 2 wrap-up is in the previous post.  Here is the Week 3 Challenge for those playing along.)
It’s been a rough week and everything in my life just feels a little…  Messy.  Not tragic, not falling apart, not even bad…  Just messy.  My brain feels cluttered.  My heart feels disorderly.  My life just feels a little grubby at the moment.

I am not a cleaner by nature.  I hate it actually.  But I always feel better once I’ve done it.  I’ll get into this more in my wrap-up at the end of this week.  But let’s just say that while I’m not the messiest person in the world, I could certainly stand to do better.

And this week, I just really feel the need to cleanse literally and metaphorically.  So for an hour everyday this week that is what I am doing.  At least one whole hour every day will be devoted to cleaning, organizing, generally scouring my world.  An hour a day…  That is beyond a lot for me to devote to this.  I was going to do a half hour every day but my good friend Sarah suggested I push it.  And she is right, I mean, why else am I doing this?  And hopefully I will come out on the other side cleaner, more organized, and feeling less like my (head)space is in chaos.

Cokehead- Week 2 Wrap up



I love Coca-Cola.  I do.  I can’t help it.  Coca-Cola is to me what alcohol is to alcoholics.  I know all the terrible things it does to your body, everything that is wrong with it, all the stories about it being used to eat away rust (which isn’t true..  You can visit Snopes for the facts, but anyway the stuff is still toxic) and whatever else and still…  I love it.  And I am very picky about my Coke.  If you pour Coke into a glass I can usually tell if it originally came out of a fountain, a can, or the shining star of all Coke containers- a glass bottle.  There is no better drink than Coke out of a glass bottle.  If you don’t know what I’m talking about, then you aren’t really tasting it.    Don’t accidentally give me a diet.  I can tell the difference.  Immediately.  Also, if the mix in your fountain is off…  I can tell that too.  I understand that this is not a marketable skill, nor one that I should be proud of.  But it is a skill.

I not only love Coke, I love Coca-Cola stuff.  I have a whole collection of Coca-Cola paraphernalia, pictured here.    


(Never mind the alcohol…  It’s our pseudo-bar put in place mostly for company since my roommate and I don’t really drink that much.)  I like the style, the red and white, the 50’s diner feel that comes with it.  It’s nostalgic of a time I never experienced and never will.  And my attention to detail in this matter is a little bizarre- Note that recently I stopped mid conversation in a colleague’s office when I noticed that there was something different about the top of the Coke I had just purchased from the vending machine.  Said colleague thought I was a nut job until he pulled out a can from his office fridge and, in fact, the tops of the cans were different.  That one was weird even for me.

I have a problem.  A delicious, refreshing problem. 


And it is terrible for you.  Most of us know all the reasons why drinking a gallon of the stuff is a bad idea but for review here are just a smattering of those reasons:

-Soda is the biggest source of empty wasted calories on the planet.  There is nothing nutritionally redeeming about it.  One 12oz can has 140 calories.  So if you drink 3 cans a day that’s 420 calories of nothing but sugar.  If you are on a 2,000 calorie a day diet that’s almost ONE FOURTH of your calories right there.  Yikes.

-Soda does not quench your thirst.  In fact it is dehydrating.  It contains a ton of sodium which also is of course terrible for your heart.

-It’s horrible for your teeth and for your bones.

-It contributes to health issues like obesity, kidney damage, liver damage, diabetes, acid reflux, and heart disease to name a few.

-The amount of caffeine in soda has its own set of related health problems.

-Studies show that drinking soda, even DIET soda, causes cravings and leads people to eat other, sweet, salty unhealthy things (have you ever had a coke and then suddenly wanted a bag of chips, or some French fries, or some chocolate?).

-Artificial sweeteners…  Don’t get me started…  This stuff is the downfall of humanity.

-It’s addictive.  Plain and simple.  And I am living proof.



Don’t take my word for it.  There are plenty of articles out there about the effects of soda on your body.  Here are just a few.  (And seriously...  There are TONS.)






It would be different if I could love all things Coca-Cola but in moderation.  Once in awhile would be fine, but for me there is no such thing.  Maybe for awhile. But eventually I start drinking it all the time.  I haven’t been one of those 10 cans a day people for a long, long time (like, probably since high school) but this is only because I recognize the problem and am constantly working to moderate it.  If I wasn’t, if I didn’t know just how terrible it is for you, I would drink it all the time.  Instead I am in a constant state of either being on or off the Coca-Cola wagon.

The longest I ever stopped drinking soda was for almost a year.  This was probably about 6 or 7 years ago when I was really in a health swing.  Kicking soda helped me lose a lot of weight and I felt really good.  But nothing, and I mean nothing, was every harder than that first week I quit.  I was prepared for the caffeine withdrawal headaches.  I was prepared for the difficulty of breaking the routine of walking into a break room and buying a Coke from the vending machine.  What I was not prepared for was the sheer lusting after the stuff.  I mean, I wanted a Coke so bad I could literally taste it.  Someone else would crack one open and I could practically smell it across the room.  And at one point, on day 2 or 3 I think, I caught myself staring at someone with a Coke.  I mean, staring that little bottle of fizzy goodness down…  I kept waiting for the person to say “My eyes are up here.”  I don’t think they noticed, thank god, but I felt like a maniac.  I may have been close to knocking someone out because I wanted that drink so bad.  If I wasn’t positive I had a problem before, I sure was then.

So that motivated me to stay off the stuff for a long long time.  And while there never was a point that I didn’t have to remind myself that I didn’t drink soda anymore, it did become easier.  Because I was just a person who didn’t drink soda.  And that was that.

Until one day I was working an event.  And it was late.  And the coffee pots had long been turned off.  And I was so so tired.  And there was pizza provided for us.  And what goes better with pizza than a nice cold, can of coke?  And besides EVERYBODY said that if you went this long without drinking soda that when you had it again it would be so sickenly sweet to you that you would practically spit it out in disgust.  And did I mention I was so so tired?  So I had a coke.

And let me tell you, that bullshit about it being too sweet is a damn lie.  That Coke was the best thing I have ever tasted in my life.  I’m pretty sure it may have been like having a little taste of heaven.  I don’t know, I’ve never been to heaven and I don’t suspect my chances of getting in are very high, but certainly if I do I hope that someone is there to greet me with an icy cold bottle of Coca-Cola goodness.  But I digress.

So I was back on the crack after that and ever since I have gone on and off.  Most recently I was off again for about 6 months, a pretty good feat.  And then I went on a trip to LA for a commercial shoot and the nice lady at the catering table had the mecca of Coca-Cola products- Mexican Coke…

Wait that sounds bad.

But seriously…  Mexican Coke.  If you don’t know what this is it is exactly what it sounds like.  Wait, not, maybe not EXACTLY what it sounds like.  No illegal drugs involved here.  It is simply Coca-Cola that is made and imported from Mexico.  Why is this a big deal?  Well 2 things- First, it comes in a glass bottle.  This is without a doubt the best way to drink a Coke.  But most importantly- It is made with real sugar.  Oh sweet jebus it is amazing.  No joke.  You would not think that real sugar would make such a difference.  You would be wrong.  It was delicious.  So was the 2nd one.  And the 3rd.  All told I think I had 4 or 5 that day.  I mean come on, what was I gonna do?  I was in LA, and it was free, and I was tired, and it was so so so so good.

Back off the wagon I went.  See that’s the problem, if I could just have something like that once in awhile as a treat it would be fine, but I can’t.  It’s like telling an alcoholic, “Hey, it’s ok…  Just take this one shot of Patron.  I mean, it’s a special occasion and you can totally handle just doing this one shot.”  Yeah right.

So, that led me to this week’s challenge.  I always feel better once I quit drinking it.  But I never ever don’t miss it.  I suppose I must resign myself to that always being the case.

This time around was a little easier.  And I suppose that is something to be said that each time I quit drinking soda it does seem to get a little easier.  I do drink a lot more coffee than I used to which sort of negates the caffeine headache issues, so that probably helps.  It also becomes easier each time to say, no thank you, I don’t drink soda.  But don’t get me wrong.  I still definitely had to think about it.  Particularly when I was getting a meal somewhere out.  It’s easy to not drink it at home.  I just don’t keep it in the house.  But out…  Well if you don’t want alcohol or it’s not an appropriate time for alcohol what do you drink?  Just plain old water (I’m not an iced tea drinker in case you are wondering).  And you know, I like water.  Water is great.  I drink a lot of water in addition to my soda.  I live in Florida.  You have to.  It’s a survival thing.  But sometimes you just want the fizz, the carbonation… And please don’t tell me to drink club soda (BLECH!) or any other substitution.  If it ain’t Coke, it’s not the same.

I also had a rough week personally.  There were no major life dilemmas but it was the kind of week where little things keep piling up- My phone took a nose dive off a table and quit working and I had to pay $100 for a new one even though I had insurance on the damn thing, I lost all the pictures and videos from that phone, and probably more importantly the text messages, some of which I never got to and will never get to see and I’m pretty sure they were important.  I had a dead car battery twice and had to get jumped twice and oh did I mention, it was not my car?  And I had to give said car back to the very kind person who let me borrow it with a dead battery.  I got into a fight with a friend who then didn’t speak to me for 2 days. And had someone tell me some things they really didn’t need to tell me, particularly if they didn’t mean them.  That and a bunch of other little just stupid blech things. 

Now how is this related?  Well mostly because my sleep went to hell this week and so I was exhausted.  And I could have reeeeeeeeeally used some afternoon soda pick me ups.  I spent a great deal of time this week staring at a computer screen trying to focus, trying very very very hard to stay on task and be productive.   And I wanted to jaunt over to the vending machine (we still have a can vending machine in my office, so much better than awful plastic bottles.  And I sure did think about it.  But I just kept thinking, no I can do anything for a week. 

And you know what?  I was right.  I didn’t have a soda. And now at the end of the week I feel better.  Even with the sleep deprivation, I can tell the difference.  I don’t want sweet things or salty things as much.  I have no desire for fast food whatsoever.  I feel myself craving water more.  And I don’t have as huge crash in the afternoon.  I only experienced any withdrawal headaches on Friday and that was mostly because I didn’t have any coffee until nearly noon (and then Excedrin Migraine is the best invention on earth for quick relief from that). 

What it comes down to is that I know I feel better when I’m not drinking it.  I know I can’t drink it in moderation.  I need to not drink it.  So I am a person who does not drink soda.  And when I fall off this wagon again I will pick myself up and put myself right back on.  Because I KNOW it is right for me.

I had a great start to my day (mimosa breakfast with Kim!) and am getting ready to relax at the pool with Whitney for a bit before dinner with her and Laurice.  I’m taking the yuck of this week and packing a lot of awesome into this last day before the new week begins.  And I am doing it without a sugar rush. 

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Week 2 Challenge- Goodbye Coca-Cola



For those looking for the week 1 wrap up please see the previous post.  I wanted to separate the 2 for anyone who is playing along at home and needs to know what the next challenge is but who doesn't have time to read last week's wrap-up yet.

Next week, starting tomorrow, Sunday, August 21st, will be NO SODA week.  Soda for me is like alcohol to an alcoholic.  I have given up soda for extended periods of time before so I know its plenty possible, but right now I am off the wagon.  And I can't have just one.  This is one of those things where it is all or nothing for me.  Because...  Well, it's like crack.  I love a good cold Coca-Cola.  But I know it is terrible for me.  And I know it makes me feel like crap.

So goodbye Coke!  And hello headache.

Don't Touch That Dial.... No Really... Don't Touch It!- Week 1 Wrap Up






Okay dear readers…  We’re all friends here, right?  So I can admit to you things that are somewhat embarrassing right?  Okay then…  Here goes…  My name is Jamie and I am a TV-aholic.

No seriously.  I am.  I like watching TV.  I just do.  And there is this huge part of me that wants to be one of those totally hip people who only has one TV in their house that they barely turn on.  But I’m not.  And I doubt I ever will be.

I grew up being an often latch-key kid.  I was raised by a mostly single mother who worked full time and didn’t get home at 3:30 when I did.  There were often not a lot of other kids nearby and if there were they weren’t always kids that I wanted anything to do with (welcome to small town in the Midwest where your people generally fall into 2 categories- redneck and snob).  During that time I didn’t have siblings in the same house either so the TV kept me company while I waited for my mom to get home.  I had the TV while I did homework.  It became the norm for me and I don’t think I ever did homework without the television on until I was in graduate school when I finally was able to realize that no, unlike what you’ve been telling yourself for the last umpteen years, you DON’T work better with the noise.

Anyway, I’m sure that this early TV as babysitter had a lot to do with watching too much.  I know other latch key kids who also have the same problem.  Well, this, liking TV, in and of its self is not necessarily a problem.  As a storyteller, I am attracted to that aspect of it, even in the reality shows.  You know, I write a lot of creative non-fiction and in essence isn’t that that reality TV is (I know some of my writer friends are having heart attacks right now, but seriously, think about it).  But when TV becomes something that you don’t think about going without, then it is a problem.

Let’s, just for kicks, take a look at the television shows that I watch regularly.  IE- I DVR them, almost always catch them live, or make it a point to catch up on on the internet.

Modern Family
America’s Got Talent
Biggest Loser
Law and Order SVU
CBS Sunday Morning
The Amazing Race
Survivor
The Good Wife
American Idol
Glee
So You Think You Can Dance
Project Runway
Top Chef
The Glee Project
Flipping Out
Falling Skies
The Walking Dead
The Daily Show


Now, let’s talk about the shows that I watch if they are on but don’t always make it a point to do so:

Any of those TV News magazine shows like Dateline, Dateline ID, 48 Hours, 48 Hours Mystery, 20/20
Most anything on ID or Court TV (or whatever they call it now)
Star Wars the Clone Wars
The Simpsons
Family Guy
Dancing With the Stars
The Bachelorette
Extreme Makeover Home Edition
Kitchen Nightmares
Hell’s Kitchen
Pretty much any of the Law and Orders except for that new one, not in NYC (What were they thinking???)


All this and I am sure I am forgetting some.  Not to mention others that I catch from time to time like Super Nanny, or American Dad, or Tosh, or The Colbert Report,  or reruns of the Gilmore Girls…  Or reruns of so many things!

And, there’s a whole list of things I don’t watch but wish I did because I know I would like them like Mad Men and Dr. Who among so many others.  My friends are constantly talking about these and I feel out of the loop.

It’s just…  A lot.  It’s a lot to keep up with.  And you know, it becomes almost like a chore.  I’ve gotten good in the past couple of years at cutting shows out that become something I have to do rather than something that I want to watch (a recent season of Dancing with the Stars was like that…  Both my roommate and I found ourselves avoiding it on the DVR, thinking, Oh crap I HAVE to watch that episode of Dancing with the Stars…  Until it finally dawned on us that, um no thank you, we didn’t.  And we happily erased it from our lives). 

For those of you who have been introduced to the wonderful world of DVR (which is probably most of you since you are reading this and not living under a rock), I know what you are thinking.  What’s the big deal?  Why don’t you just record it and watch it when you want to.

Well, see, that’s good in theory, but when I know something is there waiting I want to watch it right away.  Very rarely will something of mine be parked on the DVR for more than a few days.  I’ll get home after a late shift or a night of rehearsals and think, oh I’ll just watch that one thing and save the rest for the weekend.  But I won’t.  I’ll watch everything that was on that night.  I have no idea why, other than it’s a matter of instant gratification, something that I struggle with anyway.  I know it’s there.  I want to watch it.  Hence I must watch it now.  Which is ridiculous.

So that’s why this was challenge number one for me.

I woke up Sunday morning ready to turn on CBS Sunday Morning like I always do.  I even picked up the remote before realizing what I was doing.  It’s just a routine that is ingrained.  I stopped myself, made some breakfast and then headed to my computer where I got some writing done among other things.  Once I got into other tasks it wasn’t even something I thought about.  Same thing Monday night, after work I spent most of the night writing and doing some things around the house. 

Now, I admit the rest of the week was easy because I was so busy.  Tuesday after work I had an early birthday dinner at my friend’s Joe and Kelly’s.  Kelly, ever the supporter of all of my self improvement whims, made sure the TV wasn’t on in the house when I got there, which was terribly nice of her considering she has 2 very active boy who are sometimes tamed to allow the grown ups to talk by having the TV on.  Later in the night the distraction for them became almost necessary and instinctively Joe went to turn on something for them to watch.  “NO!” Kelly stopped him.  “We can’t!”  While I appreciated her support, I also appreciated that I was in someone else’s house, that the boys were wound up, and that the chances of a melt down were pretty high if they didn’t have some kind of diversion from the super boring grown up talk around them.  So of course I told her to go ahead and turn it on.  They landed on Billy the Exterminator, which luckily is something I neither watch nor care to watch. 

But I will tell you, it is bizarre how a TV being on almost forces you to watch.  We all found ourselves getting sucked in a little and I had to actively force myself not to watch it.  It was an interesting realization.  I mean how often is the TV on and you are purposely not trying to watch it?  If you are anything like me you will often turn the TV on while you do other things as “background noise”.  You have no intention of really watching it but feel like you need a little less quiet.  But the reality is that if it’s on, you are probably watching more than you think and so I gotta wonder, how much attention to we really devote to it when we claim to be devoting all our attention to something else?

But I digress.

Wednesday night I had a creative meeting for a new show I might be working on and didn’t get home until around 10pm.  This was one of those times that in the past I would have plopped down and watched whatever I had missed that night, but instead I bypassed it and worked on other things.

Thursday was my birthday and between running around doing things after work and a late celebratory dinner that night there was no time to think about it.  (And an 8am doctor’s appointment the next morning kept me from even thinking about wanting to turn the TV when I got home).

Friday I took the day off and ran around doing things all day including getting my nails done as a present to myself.  This was another of those moments I hadn’t thought about.  They totally have TV’s in there positioned in such a way you can’t help but see them…  but what am I gonna do ask them to turn them off?  Of course not.  So I tried to distract myself with my phone, but I gotta tell you…  That Ellen…  She’s a funny lady…  And hard as I tried, I did get a little sucked in to her show…  Makes me think about all the other times a TV is on somewhere that is so commonplace to us now we don’t even think about it.  Sports bars, breakrooms…  We’re just inundated and we don’t even realize it.

Friday night was a big get together at a local bar down the street from my apartment.  There’s a giant TV screen in there but we were at kind of a weird angle to be able to see it and frankly it was playing some kind of sport thing which I could care less about…  but it did give me pause to think, oh yeah…  There’s another one.

Which brings me to today.  I had thought that today might be the toughest.  I knew that all my celebratory shenanigans would be over, all my friends would pretty much be doing other things, I’d be chillin out, bored, putzing around the house, and tired.

Well I got the tired part right…  Let’s just say that the birthday shenanigans lasted well into the wee hours of the morning and I didn’t even want to get out of bed today let alone think about turning a TV on.  To top it off, at some point during last evening’s festivities my cell phone took a nose dive off a table onto concrete and I was forced to spend some quality time at the Verizon store to try to replace it ($100 later I will be without a phone until the replacement gets here on Tuesday…  Damn it!).  So that has filled up most of the day along with writing this.  Now I am waiting for my friend Kelly to get home so I can go over what she missed by not being there last night and then the lovely Whitney has saved me from a nothing to do fate by coming over for a girl’s pizza night to discuss what she missed by leaving early.  And, well…  There’s a lot to talk about.  So we don’t need no stinkin TV.

So, week one a success!  Now, maybe I officially cheated by the TV being on in 2 places that I was, but I feel like it couldn’t be helped.  And maybe I officially cheated by running the DVR all week so I could watch what I missed tomorrow.  But you know, this experiment is not about cutting things out for the rest of my life, it’s about proving to myself that I can do without and remembering what else I can fill my life with when I take things out I don’t need, or at least don’t let them become a priority.  I’ll probably watch most of what I missed tomorrow but if I don’t, that’s ok.  And if I find myself not caring about watching something, then that’s probably a good sign that I don’t need it anymore at all.  Lesson learned.


Friday, August 12, 2011

It Came To Me In A Dream- And Challenge #1

Last night I had a dream.  In this dream I was with a bunch of friends and there was this old abandoned motel we decided to rummage through and salvage anything that might be useful to us for future shows we might do, for our own use, just anything that was going to waste sitting in this forgotten building.  We went from room to room; checking out what was left, looking for treasure.  The problem was, the building had clearly been forgotten for awhile.  The curtains were covered in mold, the furniture was rickety and unstable, the carpet was worn through and dirty. 

It seemed like the more we looked the less we found.  And to make matters worse, the dust and the mold were killing me.  No, I mean literally killing me, suffocating me every time I stepped into one of the rooms.  (Even in my dreams I am allergic to the air!)  I would spend a few minutes trying to see what we could salvage but my eyes would start to burn, my throat would close, everyone would urge me to just go outside, insisting that whatever we were trying to hold on to wasn’t worth what it was doing to me.

Holy crap metaphor.

“…whatever we were trying to hold on to wasn’t worth what it was doing to me.”

I have felt all week like the universe is trying to point me down a path.  And it’s not being subtle.  At all.  I’m not talking about getting signs that I’m supposed to sell all my belongings and move to Iceland and become a nun or something.  To be quite clear, on many many levels I am incredibly happy with my life.  I have a great deal to be thankful for and I know that.  I not only know it, I appreciate it.  But I can be better.  I can do better, feel better, know better.  Just better.  And part of that being better is letting go of so many of the habits, beliefs, excuses, etc etc etc I have been holding on to for so long.  There are a lot of things that I thought I wanted, things I believed about who I was at the core, things I didn’t really think about that this week the universe said, you know what?  You might want this, but it’s not what you need.  And just because that is who you’ve been doesn’t mean that is who you are, and by the way those things you aren’t thinking about?  BAM!  How’s that working out for you?


“…whatever we were trying to hold on to wasn’t worth what it was doing to me.”

Ok Universe.  I am listening.

So anyway, it seems to just be the right time to start my little experiment for sure.  In thinking about what I wanted my first challenge to be I went through a number of options and kept changing my mind.  But I kept coming back to the idea of giving up TV for a week.  And every time I changed my mind something kept bringing me back.  Finally, yesterday the universe made the decision for me when I came home to discover that due to some weird power glitch in my building my cable and internet were out.  They were still out today and at some point I posted on facebook that I was cool without the cable so long as the internet was working.  My friend Sarah posted a reply, “Wait....you can deal without cable?!?!?! i'm. so. confused.
And just like that Sarah sealed the deal.  Lol. 

OK UNIVERSE!!!  FOR THE LOVE I AM LISTENING!

And as soon as I settled 100% on the decision?  The cable and internet came back.  Sheesh.

So there you have it.  Some people have asked if they can try this along with me and the answer to that is of course!  Misery loves company right?  J  Follow along if you want to or challenge yourself in your own way.

For me, starting this Sunday, August 14th, No TV.  Now I will tell you right now that my DVR will be running and when the week is over I will be catching up.  And I don’t feel bad about it.  Nor do I feel like it is cheating.  But no TV during this week and no TV shows from the internet either.  What happens after this week is moot, because again…  I can do anything for a week.  And this one will be a challenge for me, which I will write about more in my snappy wrap up blog at the end of the coming week. 

So there you have it friends.  Experiment 1 of 52 ready to commence.

Monday, August 8, 2011

And So It Begins

Well hello there.  So you’ve found your way to my little corner of the internet.  Welcome.  Now fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy ride.

Before I tell you what this is all about I should probably tell you a little about me.  In exactly 10 days from this post I turn 31 years old.  I am single, never married, no children, 1 (for the moment, this may change soon) roommate, lots of fabulous friends, a job I love maybe a little too much, and plenty to do.  I am way to busy for this blog.  I am way to busy for most things, not the least of which is taking care of myself.  Everything takes time.  And time is what I always seem to have the least of.  Well, that and some good old fashioned stick-to-it-ive-ness. 

Add to this lack of time the horrifically exorbitant amount of stuff that is out there to help make you a better person.  To be physically healthy you should walk more, lift weights, go to the gym, exercise outdoors, do yoga, do Zumba, kick box, run a 5k, run a marathon, jump rope, swim, don’t drink soda, don’t drink alcohol, kick sugar, no carbs, no meat...  To be emotionally healthy you should meditate, spend time alone, spend time with friends, turn off the tv, watch Dr. Phil, journal, go to bed earlier, get up earlier, make new friends, nurture old friendships, be in a relationship, be happy with yourself outside of a relationship.  To be financially healthy you should invest, save, budget, get rid of stuff, spend less, use coupons, buy wholesale, drive less, go out less, only use cash, never carry cash….

I mean, it’s a lot of stuff, right?  And sometimes a little confusing.  And definitely a little overwhelming.

There is a ton out there to help anyone who wants to be a better person.  But not everything is going to work for every person.  It can’t, we’re not all meant to grow in the same way. 

I read something recently that asked me- What is the one change you could make right now to improve your life? 

One?  Just one?  Are you kidding me?  There are a TON of changes I could make right now to improve my life.  But just thinking about them all makes me want to crawl back into bed and hide under the covers.  It is just way too much. 

This, by the way, is one of my problems.  I constantly feel like I have to do everything all at once.  I have a hard time with one day at a time.  Slow change makes me crazy.  And since most good, lasting change happens slowly, I am just a little bit crazy most of the time.

But I got to thinking.  Whenever I, or someone I love, is going through a rough patch that clearly has a finite amount of time to it (i.e.- a difficult pregnancy, a horrible project at work, stressing out over planning a big event, a visit from those horrible in-laws, etc etc etc) I will often tell people- Listen…  It’s only a week (or a month, or 3 months, or a year or whatever it is)…  And you can do just about ANYTHING for that amount of time.

I mean, it’s true isn’t it?  Don’t we, as people, generally have an easier time getting through something, trying something, if we know that there is an end in site? 

Well as Alice says, I give myself very good advice but I very seldom follow it.  Except this time I am.  I am going to follow my own advice, in a way anyway.

So I’ve started this blog, Experiment 52, because, well, I can do just about anything for a week.  I am going to take the next 52 weeks of this 31st year of my life and devote each week to trying something for the purpose of making my life just a little bit better.  And if I don’t like it, it’s ok.  Because it’s only a week.  And if I love whatever it is I can continue.  But there is no pressure.  Because the only commitment I have is 7 days.  Some of these will be to make me physically better, stronger, etc.  Some will be financial, some emotional.  There are no boundaries, so long as it in some way enriches my life, or has the potential to do so.  I may not do something for 7 days straight, but I will take those 7 days to commit to trying it out in some way, shape, or form.

So starting the week of my birthday I am going to set out on this little endeavor and see where it takes me.  I’ve already got a list of things to do, but if you have any suggestions please feel free to pass them along.  I’ve got about 30 things on my list so far, but that’s not nearly enough to get me through the year.

And away we go.