Apparently I'm still not exercising for myself. After Eric & I successfully managed to get a fairly healthy meal on the table by 7pm this evening and then was completely cleaned up and done for the evening, we hung over the kitchen counter and looked into the family room where our exercise machines are kept. The elliptical for me; the treadmill for him. I announced that I was now going to get on the damned machine as soon as I got my shoes on.
"Really?" Eric asked. Yes, really. "Well, if you're getting on the elliptical, I'll go change into my exercise shorts and get on my treadmill too." And there you have it.
I got on the elliptical; did a hair's width better than yesterday.
Eric spent the same 10 minutes walking on the treadmill. Miles came into the room, incredulous at what was happening all around him, then decided to try the elliptical himself. After all , we had an agreement. He could use the elliptical any time he wants without asking permission as long as he follows the following rules:
1.) He must wear shoes.
2.) He must have one foot on each petal because the machine is definitely for home use, not the gym, and to use it on one petal only will unbalance it until it breaks.
3.) He must use it safely.
And so you have it. I did the elliptical which beget Eric exercising on the treadmill which beget Miles getting excited about us exercising and trying it himself. And here I thought that I had officially given up inspiring others. The mantle is not so easy to shed.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Splendor Up Your Ass aka Splendid at Sea aka Splendor without Gas
I wasn't going to write about it. Really. Richard's Cruise To Lose, next year, is going to be aboard this very boat. He was excited to announce it; happy that the Splendor was a brand new ship that his students would travel on. And then last week, an engine fire incapicated it and left everyone aboard drifting in the Pacific Ocean, no power, no water, no lights, no food. No food. NO FOOD.
Even then, I didn't say a word. I laughed like crazy, living the adventure these poor folk were forced to endure from my not-so-great home, but one in which I can go get food if necessary. I laughed with Eric, I speculated what Richard would be doing if this trip was his CTL trip, instead of almost a year in the future. But I kept my mouth shut.
But then, two nights ago, Eric & I watched a newscast that was so incredibly funny, even as it was pathetic, that I started writing and writing and writing and I realized that the post was too long and although it was funny ( I know funny when I see it), it wasn't worth the space I was allocating to it. So I'm going to simply state what is on my mind about the Spendor and Richard's Cruise To Lose and what has kept me in stitches for the past couple of days.
The U.S. Navy sent an aircraft carrier out to the Spendor to provide food for the passengers. Because of the power failure, all the food on board had spoiled. Reports told of passengers waiting in line for two hours to receive their sea rations. And what did those rations consist of?
1. Canned Crab Meat.
2. Spam.
3. Croissants.
4. Pop Tarts.
Which brings to mind only two questions.
1.) How, exactly, do you account for these foods on Richard's food mover? (What would Richard have his students do in such a situation?) and
2.) Pop Tarts come in 28 flavors. Which one goes best with crab meat and spam?
Even then, I didn't say a word. I laughed like crazy, living the adventure these poor folk were forced to endure from my not-so-great home, but one in which I can go get food if necessary. I laughed with Eric, I speculated what Richard would be doing if this trip was his CTL trip, instead of almost a year in the future. But I kept my mouth shut.
But then, two nights ago, Eric & I watched a newscast that was so incredibly funny, even as it was pathetic, that I started writing and writing and writing and I realized that the post was too long and although it was funny ( I know funny when I see it), it wasn't worth the space I was allocating to it. So I'm going to simply state what is on my mind about the Spendor and Richard's Cruise To Lose and what has kept me in stitches for the past couple of days.
| "Conditions on board the ship are very challenging and we sincerely apologize for the discomfort and inconvenience our guests are currently enduring," said company president Gerry Cahill. |
1. Canned Crab Meat.
2. Spam.
3. Croissants.
4. Pop Tarts.
Which brings to mind only two questions.
1.) How, exactly, do you account for these foods on Richard's food mover? (What would Richard have his students do in such a situation?) and
2.) Pop Tarts come in 28 flavors. Which one goes best with crab meat and spam?
Frosted flavor
- Peanut Butter and Jelly
- Apple Strudel
- Frosted Blueberry
- Frosted Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- Frosted Cherry
- Chocolate Chip
- Chocolate Banana Split
- Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough
- Frosted Chocolate Fudge
- Cinnamon Roll
- Frosted Wild Watermelon
- Frosted Wild Berry
- Frosted Cookies & Cream
- Ginger Bread
- Wild Tropical Blast
- Hot Fudge Sundae
- Frosted Raspberry
- S'Mores
- Frosted Strawberry
- Frosted Strawberry Milkshake
- Vanilla Milkshake
- Ice Creme Sandwich
- Frosted Wildberry
- Blueberry Muffin
- Cookies 'N Creme
- Wild Grape (Newest)
Unfrosted
Smart Tarts- Blueberry
- Strawberry
- Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- Icy Cold Polar
- Wild Berry
Pop-Tarts Splitz
- Chocolate Vanilla
- Strawberry Blueberry
- Chocolate Strawberry
- Maple Brown Sugar
- Strawberry Lemonade
Limited edition
- Dulce De Leche (2008–Present)
- Guava Mango (2008–Present)
- Chocolate Banana Split (2009–Present)
- Orange Cream (2009–Present)
- Blueberry Muffin (2009–Present)
- Pumpkin Pie (Autumn 2010)
- Gingerbread (Every Christmas)
Printed Fun
- Knock Knock Jokes Frosted Berry Who?
- Barbie Sparkleberry
- Barbie Wildberry
- Hot Wheels Cinna-Match 1 Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- American Idol Blue Raspberry
- Indiana Jones Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- NFL Frosted Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- Pictionary
- Nix Family Laffy Taffy Flavors
- Nascar Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- Super Silly Berry Delight
Whole grain
- Strawberry
- Brown Sugar Cinnamon
- Chocolate Fudge
- Blueberry
- Wild Berry (Frosted)
- Cherry Berry Rick Pip
- Whole grain
Flavors in the UK
- Chocotastic
- Strawberry Sensation
Discontinued
[16]- Dutch Apple
- Chocolate Vanilla Creme
- Pancake Syrup blueberry (German)
- My Goodness Cherry
- Frosted Grape
- Frosted Wild Watermelon
- Hot Chocolate
- French Toast
- Wild Tropical Blast
- Frosted Caramel Chocolate
- Frosted Double Berry
- Mint Chocolate Chip*
- Low Fat Frosted Chocolate Fudge
- PiƱa Colada
- Disney Princess Jewelberry
- Hello Kitty Meowberry
- Vanilla
- Wild Magic Burst
- Unfrosted Cherry
- Apple Cinnamon
- Strawberry Cheese Danish
- Chocolate Graham Cracker
Musing...
I didn't make it to exercise class again tonight. That means that I've only been there two times in the last two weeks. There have been reasons, not excuses but real reasons for not attending, but they don't make me feel any better. Tonight? I am still recovering from last Tuesday's infusion of experimental poison into my system in an attempt to control my IBD. The worst of the after-effects last 36 to 48 hours post treatment and include severe headaches, body aches, and fevers, and thing go-around was not any different. Sadly, though, I also ran out of a critical medication yesterday that requires a triplicate prescription, necessitating a trip down to Cedars Sinai earlier today. By the time I had picked up the prescription (why, oh why can't this doctor have the prescription ready ever when he says it will be?) and dropped it off at my local drug store to be filled, I was done. Completely done. Fever and headache back. 4:45pm. Only 45 minutes before it was time to leave again. And so I made the pre-emptive decision not to go. Again.
I won't be going to class on Saturday as Eric has signed us up for a special seminar dealing with families and it's important that I attend it. Next Tuesday, I have a commitment through the IBD center's experimental infusion program that I have to keep in order to be retained in the program and although I really have a feeling that this infusion drug is not the answer for my problems, it still helps. It's very disheartening to always be having my Slimmons schedule so disrupted these days, though.
To counteract it to a small degree, we finally had my elliptical machine built three days ago. Of course I've been too ill to try and use it until now, but this evening was day one. I'm not going to pretend that I am Suzanne Boese, one of my heroines who has exercised an amazing number of days in a row and is a true Ricahrd Simmons success story, and will be able to exercise in a like manner; our underlying illnesses are similar and I love her for understanding autoimmune issues (as I do Wendy Dahlberg), but the treatments for mine are so horrid and leave me so incapacitated that all I can do physically is what I can do. Tonight it was 5 sequences of 200 steps each. Each time I ran through them, my pulse grew higher. 110. 115. 118. 125. 128. Total calories expended for the effort according to the machine's read? 75. And I am exhausted beyond belief.
Eric says that I shouldn't expect more so soon after an infusion, but I am frustrated. Frustrated. FRUSTRATED! I remember getting ready to participate in Richard's "Party Off the Pounds" video. Admittedly, in Physical Therapy I only started at 200 steps total, but I was soon doing 270 steps per minute for 30 minutes straight! Although I still had underlying serious disease that made participating in that video difficult, I was strong. Muscularly strong. Now I am so weak...
There is a food issue that I am dealing with too. My life has been turned upside down with food challenges since joining the Splaver clan, and at my infusion on Tuesday, I had a heart-to-heart with my doctor (Dr. M- who works with Dr. V-; he's the treating physician at the IBD Center in charge of this particular study) about my escalating symptoms and how I think my food intake as well as the stress living under this roof is affecting me. I thank God for bringing Richard into my life. The old me, especially in the face of weight gain and illness would have denied anything going wrong. Denied the effect that food had on my IBD symptoms. On my life. Thanks to Richard, though, I felt empowered enough to initiate the conversation with my doctor, was candid about what I was eating and how, and especially the times that I eat.
My new family is still mostly out of control, and Eric admits that the systems that are now put in place and the order that is being established is due to me. He is the head of the family, in charge of controlling the older boys (they're full teens and the oldest is so disturbed that I can hardly describe it) as they are not going to listen to new step mom directly, but he - and they - know that I am supporting him in this effort. The younger two - Gabby and Miles - fully respond to my authority and the fact that I will take pretty-much anything away from them that I feel necessary to get them to tow the line.
Eric claims that the kids don't hate me. I'm very sure they all do. That's part of the reason that it's important that we attend this seminar. Gabby will be going with us - the older two refuse to attend and Miles is too young, but Eric thinks that the interaction with Gabby will reassure me. I have a feeling that he is going to be surprised at how she - and how she says the others - feels about the entire new situation, but we'll see. They all make no bones about hating living in Northridge and know that being here is my fault. (I can NOT make the commute from Calabasas to anywhere that I need to be on a regular basis with my disease so active, and would not have moved forward with Eric without his commitment to move to the valley.)
In the end, I truly think that Northridge is a better place for them than Calabasas, but they can't see it right now. Eric, although financially well to do by normal standards, was the poor relation in Calabasas, and they're all coming to an age where they would have soon realized it. In Northridge, we are able to live the lifestyle that his income and savings provide. They are far better off than about 50% of their classmates, and on a par with the other 50%. They are now interacting and learning to deal with cultures and races other than either whites or black kids of superstar sports figures, and exposure to real life is going to serve them well when they grow up. I know that for myself, despite now living so close to Mom and her becoming so incredibly dependent on me due to proximity as well as a husband who can fix her computer on demand, I love my new neighborhood as much as I am growing to hate the house that we are living in (nothing works here... nothing! After over 3 months, we still don't even have consistent hot water in the bathrooms... and the worst part is the lay-out of this house is so perfect and it is so beautiful and the neighborhood is so great that it should have been our dream home) and with Diane (Can Do Diane!) continuing help, we are making our way through all of Eric's left over boxes. As soon as we have disposed of all the unnecessary stuff here, we can put moving on the table. Again. Hopefully in the same neighborhood, and probably we will buy the next house instead of renting. Hooray.
OK, back on to task. I'm in terrible trouble food-wise and exercise-wise too. Again, thanks to Richard, I am unafraid to discuss it although in his class during Project Me is probably inappropriate because my issues are so unique that the discussion won't help the other classmates and those who don't know me will probably listen and think that I am just making up excuses. But I had a long discussion with Eric about what the doctor & I talked about, starting on Tuesday night in bed as he tended to my issues, ongoing through yesterday, and it's continuing again this morning. The insanity regarding food in this family has to stop, and stop now. We have agreed that we need to put order into the two refrigerators we have. The inside one is currently nothing but condiments at this point and the garage fridge, mostly empty, is the one that contains what "good" food that we have. That organization MUST be reversed and immediately. We are not likely to eat vegetables (not that I can eat ANY vegetables right now, raw or cooked) or proteins if we have to go into the garage, and when we look inside of the inside fridge and all we see is condiments, our next stop is the pantry. We are putting that in order tomorrow when the kids are back in school and won't be offering up constant opinions.
We also need to stop this insane cycle where our lives are so disrupted that we don't start getting dinner ready until 8 pm and often don't eat until 9pm or later. I've told Eric that going forward, we MUST prepare dinner in the morning right after whatever kids who are going to school have left, and then we have agreed that we will eat between 6:30 and 7:30 nightly; those nights that he or I are not here (his therapeutic groups and me at Slimmons), the rest of the family will eat in that time frame and we will have a snack (or dinner) before we leave, and another snack when we get home. This current insane schedule is not only not doing us (especially me) any good, but it's not doing the kids any good for the long-term either. They need the foundation, NOW , of a healthy eating schedule and diet even as their likes and dislikes make food planning difficult.
That's the next thing. I have never done well at menu plans; in my single life, it always worked better for me to just keep a lot of healthy food in the house and my meal selections were fine based on what I surrounded myself with. But family life is so different that it's like living on another planet. An 8-year-old won't eat what a 16-year-old will won't eat what an adult will, and we need to start making menus up well in advance. That process starts today since we finally did our very first large-scale shopping trip at Valley Produce yesterday and have healthy foods in the house. I hope to get a wipe board (yes, another one) to mount in the kitchen to announce what dinner is daily. The kids eat cereal for breakfast or whatever (don't go there... it's too difficult getting four kids out of the door assuming they're going to school at all on a given day for me to monitor their breakfast choices); most of them get school lunches although I pack Miles (age 8) his the night before, but I can can damned well plan dinner menus and insist that we all keep to them. Although their tastes are very different, most meals can be tailored so that they all will eat at least part of them. And they're already used to the idea that since I've come on the scene, what's served for dinner is what is for dinner and if they don't like it, they can just not eat. If we plan the meals now, and prepare them in the morning when it's quiet here, we can do this. We WILL do it.
For myself, my colon is so bad right now that I cannot tolerate any fresh or cooked fruits or vegetables. Salt is a killer... it's bad for people with IBD in general and I'll spare you the details why because it's gross, and I'm pretty-much reduced to eating carbs and lighter proteins. Fish, fish, and eggs. A baked potato or plain pasta here and there. It's an incredibly boring diet which, because of the insanity here as well as the lack of food choices, I've not adhered to, and that changed yesterday. Mostly. Sadly, I did succumb to some pretzels last night and I paid for it this morning. Oh god,but I paid. I am the poster child for food directly affecting my health. I know that there are lots of other poster children too - most in Richard's clubhouse - but I also know the cycle of denial they're caught up in and at least I'm not taking that affect on. I know what I am doing, now I just have to fix it. A much harder task than it sounds, but do-able all the same. I know that I can't continue on as I behaving now. I feel as though I am spiraling out of control and going to die if I don't fix my menu. And that fear is WAY justified.
Sadly, I don't have much support. There are few people who understand where I came from and what i am dealing with now, and I trust fewer than I used to. I cannot have 'friends' in my life who, if I have a bad week and need support, will not only abandon me, but will turn and attack too. I am not Richard Simmons. Yes, I stood up for him for a long time, but I did that for him, not for his target audience.
I am not required to always have my composure under control; I am not even required to keep my weight stable or my life out of chaos at all times. What I am required to do is to do what is right for me, and make the best choices I can for myself, and I am continuing to do so, and hopefully will make it back to a point where I can speak for Richard again too, but if not, I am my own first priority. Apparently many people can not live with my current attitude. I only hope that they can forgive me my frailties in time. I suppose that will happen when they don't see themselves in me so much.
I'm living my own hell right now, but I'm damned well going to climb out of this pit and bring the rest of my new family with me. I am dealing with reality, not what my imagination is making up. Eric knows that where I'm headed is a better place for us all, and he's committed to following whatever I decide on. So it's really up to me. I just have to be strong. And I have to pick the friends I keep close to me wisely so that I have the support - in all areas, not just diet and exercise - I need. There are plenty of resources out there. It's like the old "Love Yourself and Win" tape that Richard had me participate in. I have to "Practice Patience" as I seek out what I need.
I won't be going to class on Saturday as Eric has signed us up for a special seminar dealing with families and it's important that I attend it. Next Tuesday, I have a commitment through the IBD center's experimental infusion program that I have to keep in order to be retained in the program and although I really have a feeling that this infusion drug is not the answer for my problems, it still helps. It's very disheartening to always be having my Slimmons schedule so disrupted these days, though.
To counteract it to a small degree, we finally had my elliptical machine built three days ago. Of course I've been too ill to try and use it until now, but this evening was day one. I'm not going to pretend that I am Suzanne Boese, one of my heroines who has exercised an amazing number of days in a row and is a true Ricahrd Simmons success story, and will be able to exercise in a like manner; our underlying illnesses are similar and I love her for understanding autoimmune issues (as I do Wendy Dahlberg), but the treatments for mine are so horrid and leave me so incapacitated that all I can do physically is what I can do. Tonight it was 5 sequences of 200 steps each. Each time I ran through them, my pulse grew higher. 110. 115. 118. 125. 128. Total calories expended for the effort according to the machine's read? 75. And I am exhausted beyond belief.
Eric says that I shouldn't expect more so soon after an infusion, but I am frustrated. Frustrated. FRUSTRATED! I remember getting ready to participate in Richard's "Party Off the Pounds" video. Admittedly, in Physical Therapy I only started at 200 steps total, but I was soon doing 270 steps per minute for 30 minutes straight! Although I still had underlying serious disease that made participating in that video difficult, I was strong. Muscularly strong. Now I am so weak...
There is a food issue that I am dealing with too. My life has been turned upside down with food challenges since joining the Splaver clan, and at my infusion on Tuesday, I had a heart-to-heart with my doctor (Dr. M- who works with Dr. V-; he's the treating physician at the IBD Center in charge of this particular study) about my escalating symptoms and how I think my food intake as well as the stress living under this roof is affecting me. I thank God for bringing Richard into my life. The old me, especially in the face of weight gain and illness would have denied anything going wrong. Denied the effect that food had on my IBD symptoms. On my life. Thanks to Richard, though, I felt empowered enough to initiate the conversation with my doctor, was candid about what I was eating and how, and especially the times that I eat.
My new family is still mostly out of control, and Eric admits that the systems that are now put in place and the order that is being established is due to me. He is the head of the family, in charge of controlling the older boys (they're full teens and the oldest is so disturbed that I can hardly describe it) as they are not going to listen to new step mom directly, but he - and they - know that I am supporting him in this effort. The younger two - Gabby and Miles - fully respond to my authority and the fact that I will take pretty-much anything away from them that I feel necessary to get them to tow the line.
Eric claims that the kids don't hate me. I'm very sure they all do. That's part of the reason that it's important that we attend this seminar. Gabby will be going with us - the older two refuse to attend and Miles is too young, but Eric thinks that the interaction with Gabby will reassure me. I have a feeling that he is going to be surprised at how she - and how she says the others - feels about the entire new situation, but we'll see. They all make no bones about hating living in Northridge and know that being here is my fault. (I can NOT make the commute from Calabasas to anywhere that I need to be on a regular basis with my disease so active, and would not have moved forward with Eric without his commitment to move to the valley.)
In the end, I truly think that Northridge is a better place for them than Calabasas, but they can't see it right now. Eric, although financially well to do by normal standards, was the poor relation in Calabasas, and they're all coming to an age where they would have soon realized it. In Northridge, we are able to live the lifestyle that his income and savings provide. They are far better off than about 50% of their classmates, and on a par with the other 50%. They are now interacting and learning to deal with cultures and races other than either whites or black kids of superstar sports figures, and exposure to real life is going to serve them well when they grow up. I know that for myself, despite now living so close to Mom and her becoming so incredibly dependent on me due to proximity as well as a husband who can fix her computer on demand, I love my new neighborhood as much as I am growing to hate the house that we are living in (nothing works here... nothing! After over 3 months, we still don't even have consistent hot water in the bathrooms... and the worst part is the lay-out of this house is so perfect and it is so beautiful and the neighborhood is so great that it should have been our dream home) and with Diane (Can Do Diane!) continuing help, we are making our way through all of Eric's left over boxes. As soon as we have disposed of all the unnecessary stuff here, we can put moving on the table. Again. Hopefully in the same neighborhood, and probably we will buy the next house instead of renting. Hooray.
OK, back on to task. I'm in terrible trouble food-wise and exercise-wise too. Again, thanks to Richard, I am unafraid to discuss it although in his class during Project Me is probably inappropriate because my issues are so unique that the discussion won't help the other classmates and those who don't know me will probably listen and think that I am just making up excuses. But I had a long discussion with Eric about what the doctor & I talked about, starting on Tuesday night in bed as he tended to my issues, ongoing through yesterday, and it's continuing again this morning. The insanity regarding food in this family has to stop, and stop now. We have agreed that we need to put order into the two refrigerators we have. The inside one is currently nothing but condiments at this point and the garage fridge, mostly empty, is the one that contains what "good" food that we have. That organization MUST be reversed and immediately. We are not likely to eat vegetables (not that I can eat ANY vegetables right now, raw or cooked) or proteins if we have to go into the garage, and when we look inside of the inside fridge and all we see is condiments, our next stop is the pantry. We are putting that in order tomorrow when the kids are back in school and won't be offering up constant opinions.
We also need to stop this insane cycle where our lives are so disrupted that we don't start getting dinner ready until 8 pm and often don't eat until 9pm or later. I've told Eric that going forward, we MUST prepare dinner in the morning right after whatever kids who are going to school have left, and then we have agreed that we will eat between 6:30 and 7:30 nightly; those nights that he or I are not here (his therapeutic groups and me at Slimmons), the rest of the family will eat in that time frame and we will have a snack (or dinner) before we leave, and another snack when we get home. This current insane schedule is not only not doing us (especially me) any good, but it's not doing the kids any good for the long-term either. They need the foundation, NOW , of a healthy eating schedule and diet even as their likes and dislikes make food planning difficult.
That's the next thing. I have never done well at menu plans; in my single life, it always worked better for me to just keep a lot of healthy food in the house and my meal selections were fine based on what I surrounded myself with. But family life is so different that it's like living on another planet. An 8-year-old won't eat what a 16-year-old will won't eat what an adult will, and we need to start making menus up well in advance. That process starts today since we finally did our very first large-scale shopping trip at Valley Produce yesterday and have healthy foods in the house. I hope to get a wipe board (yes, another one) to mount in the kitchen to announce what dinner is daily. The kids eat cereal for breakfast or whatever (don't go there... it's too difficult getting four kids out of the door assuming they're going to school at all on a given day for me to monitor their breakfast choices); most of them get school lunches although I pack Miles (age 8) his the night before, but I can can damned well plan dinner menus and insist that we all keep to them. Although their tastes are very different, most meals can be tailored so that they all will eat at least part of them. And they're already used to the idea that since I've come on the scene, what's served for dinner is what is for dinner and if they don't like it, they can just not eat. If we plan the meals now, and prepare them in the morning when it's quiet here, we can do this. We WILL do it.
For myself, my colon is so bad right now that I cannot tolerate any fresh or cooked fruits or vegetables. Salt is a killer... it's bad for people with IBD in general and I'll spare you the details why because it's gross, and I'm pretty-much reduced to eating carbs and lighter proteins. Fish, fish, and eggs. A baked potato or plain pasta here and there. It's an incredibly boring diet which, because of the insanity here as well as the lack of food choices, I've not adhered to, and that changed yesterday. Mostly. Sadly, I did succumb to some pretzels last night and I paid for it this morning. Oh god,but I paid. I am the poster child for food directly affecting my health. I know that there are lots of other poster children too - most in Richard's clubhouse - but I also know the cycle of denial they're caught up in and at least I'm not taking that affect on. I know what I am doing, now I just have to fix it. A much harder task than it sounds, but do-able all the same. I know that I can't continue on as I behaving now. I feel as though I am spiraling out of control and going to die if I don't fix my menu. And that fear is WAY justified.
Sadly, I don't have much support. There are few people who understand where I came from and what i am dealing with now, and I trust fewer than I used to. I cannot have 'friends' in my life who, if I have a bad week and need support, will not only abandon me, but will turn and attack too. I am not Richard Simmons. Yes, I stood up for him for a long time, but I did that for him, not for his target audience.
I am not required to always have my composure under control; I am not even required to keep my weight stable or my life out of chaos at all times. What I am required to do is to do what is right for me, and make the best choices I can for myself, and I am continuing to do so, and hopefully will make it back to a point where I can speak for Richard again too, but if not, I am my own first priority. Apparently many people can not live with my current attitude. I only hope that they can forgive me my frailties in time. I suppose that will happen when they don't see themselves in me so much.
I'm living my own hell right now, but I'm damned well going to climb out of this pit and bring the rest of my new family with me. I am dealing with reality, not what my imagination is making up. Eric knows that where I'm headed is a better place for us all, and he's committed to following whatever I decide on. So it's really up to me. I just have to be strong. And I have to pick the friends I keep close to me wisely so that I have the support - in all areas, not just diet and exercise - I need. There are plenty of resources out there. It's like the old "Love Yourself and Win" tape that Richard had me participate in. I have to "Practice Patience" as I seek out what I need.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Share The Love: A Different Featured Artist Every Week!
O.M.G.!!!!!!!! This week's featured artisan is really something special!
Little Sistah Studio features hand made papers, block print cards and gift tags, hand made collages, and more. Her work is beautiful, it's different, and it's definitely worth a looksie. Perfect for somebody special this Holiday Season.
It's for shops like this that I join many Artists coalitions, and Betsy's work is beautiful!
Little Sistah Studio features hand made papers, block print cards and gift tags, hand made collages, and more. Her work is beautiful, it's different, and it's definitely worth a looksie. Perfect for somebody special this Holiday Season.
It's for shops like this that I join many Artists coalitions, and Betsy's work is beautiful!
This weeks Featured Artisan is Little Sistah Studio. Works of art you can share with loved ones, family, friends. You can find Little Sistah Studio at:
What's New?
This is Jorge Morales. He built the Elliptical that is now in our family room.
We allowed him the honor of being the first person to ride the Elliptical. We told him that it was because he made the thing after it languished in a box for so many months and that he was our hero. That part would be true. But the part where we also wanted to see if it would hold together before we got onto the machine ourselves was also true and unshared - lol!
This is Diane, aka "Can Do Diane" who helped us find Jorge and bring him into our lives, as well as helping us in so many aspects of our new lives together. You might recognize Diane from when she and I were in Richard Simmons's "Party Off the Pounds" and "Love Yourself and Win" videos together. She has never ridden an Elliptical before and found it more challenging than she expected.
This is my new husband Eric. He is the one who cared enough about me to bring this Elliptical into my life so that even though my personal schedule is so disrupted that I do not attend Exercise Classes as consistently as I used to, I have ample opportunity to burn some calories. I think this is the first time he has been on an Elliptical too.
And here I am, myself.
The following statements would be true:
1.) I am happy to have a new exercise machine that is dedicated to my own special physical needs.
2.) I am wearing several layers as I am a 'Splaver' in name only, and am freezing in this new house constantly even as everyone else - at only 60 degrees - is complaining that it is hot inside.
3.) That I have gained weight, this picture is the proof, and I am really grateful that this elliptical machine has been brought into our home to help me address the issue.
* * * * *
Another thing that is new is that we picked up the keys to my new office/studio yesterday. I do not have any inside pictures yet and, in fact, it's still so dirty and there's no furniture that I will save the "Grand Opening" shots until later. However, here are the grounds and an outside shot of the office.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Creative Focus
"And what, exactly, were you doing on Skype at 5:30 this morning?" asked Eric when we finally awoke for good at 9. "Talking to Claudia. (1)" I responded. "I had a headache, got up to take some Tylenol, then checked my e-mail and FB while waiting for it to take effect. Claudia (2) forgot that 1. We're 3 hours earlier than her, and 2.) Daylight Savings Time had ended!" Of course, I had to answer the Skype Bell when it rang. Claudia, of all people, has proven herself an amazing friend. We always have things to say.
Now Eric & the kids are off at Ian's Birthday party for the Movie Portion. I have begged off, heading down to Torrance for the Southern California Handweaver's Guild Fiber Festival and will join them later for lunch. I have connections to re-establish, Guinea Pigs to potentially place (I'll tell the story of the X-Box and the Guinea Pigs later... all I can say is that I will miss the little guys terribly, the X-box not so much), and maybe a little shopping to do. I want to announce, verbally only, the opening of my new office. More on that later too. And most of all, I want to find me again.
Reconnecting with my creative friends is a critical step towards returning to myself. With all the craziness around me, with all the duplicity and not knowing who I can and cannot trust anymore, I know without a doubt that I can trust Claudia, I can trust Richard (who had some secret and unsolicited advice for me yesterday that shocked me - that he would actually say it, not the viewpoint itself - I had already decided on myself anyway but hearing him offer the same makes me more confident in my decision) and many of the good people at Slimmons, and I can trust my Artisan friends who turned out in force at our Wedding Reception even as I had been out of contact for so many months. And finally, my new friends at BILY, who have been supporting Eric as a single father of four in under circumstances that I thought I understood but realized that nobody really could "get" until they've lived with them themselves, and have been incredibly supportive even as I have not been consistent at attending meetings or in my responses to them.
Thanks to good friends who helped put our house in good enough order that I can now have people over, it's time to start entertaining. It's time for smiles instead of my constant flow of tears. It's time to create, both objects of beauty as well as a happy home, to reinvent myself in my new circumstances instead of being destructive all the time and mourning the old situation. It's time to get back to my former self who not only others liked, but I liked too. If I look at my life objectively instead of through the eyes of somebody so tired I can hardly function, living here is actually good. And it's getting better. Thanks to the loving support of Eric who is now providing the things I need (cleaning service, an office to get away to), I know I can achieve balance again.
It's good to find some focus.
(1) Claudia's personal Blog attached.
(2) Claudia's Yoga Blog Attached.
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| Why do I continue to turn out sideways when this pic,in Laura's computer, is right side up? |
Now Eric & the kids are off at Ian's Birthday party for the Movie Portion. I have begged off, heading down to Torrance for the Southern California Handweaver's Guild Fiber Festival and will join them later for lunch. I have connections to re-establish, Guinea Pigs to potentially place (I'll tell the story of the X-Box and the Guinea Pigs later... all I can say is that I will miss the little guys terribly, the X-box not so much), and maybe a little shopping to do. I want to announce, verbally only, the opening of my new office. More on that later too. And most of all, I want to find me again.
Reconnecting with my creative friends is a critical step towards returning to myself. With all the craziness around me, with all the duplicity and not knowing who I can and cannot trust anymore, I know without a doubt that I can trust Claudia, I can trust Richard (who had some secret and unsolicited advice for me yesterday that shocked me - that he would actually say it, not the viewpoint itself - I had already decided on myself anyway but hearing him offer the same makes me more confident in my decision) and many of the good people at Slimmons, and I can trust my Artisan friends who turned out in force at our Wedding Reception even as I had been out of contact for so many months. And finally, my new friends at BILY, who have been supporting Eric as a single father of four in under circumstances that I thought I understood but realized that nobody really could "get" until they've lived with them themselves, and have been incredibly supportive even as I have not been consistent at attending meetings or in my responses to them.
Thanks to good friends who helped put our house in good enough order that I can now have people over, it's time to start entertaining. It's time for smiles instead of my constant flow of tears. It's time to create, both objects of beauty as well as a happy home, to reinvent myself in my new circumstances instead of being destructive all the time and mourning the old situation. It's time to get back to my former self who not only others liked, but I liked too. If I look at my life objectively instead of through the eyes of somebody so tired I can hardly function, living here is actually good. And it's getting better. Thanks to the loving support of Eric who is now providing the things I need (cleaning service, an office to get away to), I know I can achieve balance again.
It's good to find some focus.
(1) Claudia's personal Blog attached.
(2) Claudia's Yoga Blog Attached.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Halo Reach: The End!
Hoorah!
There has been nothing but trouble in this home ever since the X-box game "Halo Reach" entered through our door. Fighting, verbal abuse, physical punching and kicking over the rights to play it. All from children that really are too young to be exposed to it anyway. Grades have plummeted, attitudes have soured, cooperation has decreased.
Tonight the children had another big fight over this stupid game over which Eric & I tried to arbitrate an answer. They would not listen. They continued with the "F" this and "F" that. But then the most miraculous thing in the world happened. One child, purportedly the "owner" of the game, removed the disk from the X-box and, instead of her normal protocol of protecting it at all costs, threw it up in the air in an attempt to attack her brother. I happened to be in the kitchen overseeing the entire argument at the time.
I watched with glee as, as if in slow motion, that disk sailed through the air in oh so delicate an arch, revolving and rotating as it went, reflective surface catching the light in flashes of iridescent brilliance, and then landing between the sofa and the cushion of the same. And without any rancor at all, I quickly and gracefully walked over to the sofa and I took care of the problem of "Halo Reach" once and for all.
This is one game that will never be inserted into an X-box again.
:D
There has been nothing but trouble in this home ever since the X-box game "Halo Reach" entered through our door. Fighting, verbal abuse, physical punching and kicking over the rights to play it. All from children that really are too young to be exposed to it anyway. Grades have plummeted, attitudes have soured, cooperation has decreased.
Tonight the children had another big fight over this stupid game over which Eric & I tried to arbitrate an answer. They would not listen. They continued with the "F" this and "F" that. But then the most miraculous thing in the world happened. One child, purportedly the "owner" of the game, removed the disk from the X-box and, instead of her normal protocol of protecting it at all costs, threw it up in the air in an attempt to attack her brother. I happened to be in the kitchen overseeing the entire argument at the time.
I watched with glee as, as if in slow motion, that disk sailed through the air in oh so delicate an arch, revolving and rotating as it went, reflective surface catching the light in flashes of iridescent brilliance, and then landing between the sofa and the cushion of the same. And without any rancor at all, I quickly and gracefully walked over to the sofa and I took care of the problem of "Halo Reach" once and for all.
This is one game that will never be inserted into an X-box again.
:D
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