Friday, December 26, 2008

no brainer diet tips

This is from Dumb Little Man. A set of no nonsense diet tips that should be do-able and are just plain logical (full article: http://www.dumblittleman.com/2007/08/easy-and-sexy-ways-to-lose-50-pounds.html)

  • Also remember that with any of the changes below, it's hardest for the first few days. After that, you get used to it, and it gets easier.
  • Drink water. If you typically drink lots of juice or soda or alcohol, replacing these calorie-filled drinks with water will cut a few hundred calories a day.
  • Exercise for 15-20 minutes. If you have a weight problem, chances are you also have a problem with regular exercise. That's probably because you tried to do too much. Just commit to 15 minutes a day. That's not hard at all. And don't do anything intense, especially for the first month. Take it easy -- do a few crunches, a few push ups, jog in place for a few minutes. If you do this every day, you'll burn 100-150 calories, depending on your size and metabolism.
  • Replace a fatty snack with veggies. Potato chips, fries, anything that's greasy -- those are laden with calories. Fat is the most calorie-filled food type there is. If you eat a snack like this every day, replace it with cut-up carrots, broccoli, celery, or a salad (with low-fat dressing, not anything fatty).
  • Have sex daily. One of the best exercises there is. Of course, you'll need to do it beyond your usual three minutes. If you can get 15 minutes of sex in a day, you can burn 150 calories. You also might need to find a willing partner. The exercise in the item above might help with that.
  • Replace a sugary snack with fruits. If you eat Twinkies, Ding Dongs, donuts, candy bars, a carton of ice cream ... you know you need to cut those out. Try fruit instead. Berries are my favorite.
  • Eat a healthy breakfast. If you eat eggs and bacon, or something covered in syrup, or anything else sweet or fatty, replace it with something healthier. Steel-cut oatmeal with blueberries, ground flaxseed and almonds is a great choice that is delicious. Also try whole-grain cereal with low-fat milk or soy milk.
  • Walk, and use the stairs. Park 5-7 minutes away from work, which adds up to about 10-15 minutes of walking a day, to and from work (in addition to the exercise mentioned above). Use the stairs instead of the elevator. That's about 100 calories total.
  • Use non-fat milk in your latte. If you use half-and-half in your latte, using non-fat milk will save you about 250 calories.
  • Skip butter. If you put butter on your toast, your roll, and your baked potato, you can save 200-300 calories a day if you skip the butter.
  • Plan snacks, don't snack randomly. Munching on little things here and there, throughout the day, can add up to hundreds of calories. Instead, plan on a midmorning and mid afternoon snack, and make at least one of them healthy. Don't snack in between snacks.
  • Go with red pasta sauce, not white. Marinara sauce instead of Alfredo will save you a couple hundred calories. Skip the meat too.
  • Eat baked chicken, not fried. Fried chicken contains a lot of fat absorbed from frying oil, as well as the fatty skin. Skip the skin, and bake the chicken. Herb it up good, with some pepper, and it tastes great.
  • Skip seconds, and eat slower. If you go back for an extra piece of meat and buttered bread, you're adding another few hundred calories. Instead, eat slowly, and you'll get full faster. Also, even if feel hungry after the first helping, wait for 20 minutes. Often, the feeling of hunger will go away.
  • Air-pop popcorn. Movie popcorn is full of oil and butter. Tons of fat. Instead, air-pop the popcorn. You can put salt on it, but not butter.
  • Go for pretzels, not peanuts. Nuts contain tons of calories. Instead, snack on mini-pretzels (not the soft kind), which can satisfy the salt craving without all of the fat.
  • Skip the muffin. Muffins are just cake, if you buy them at a coffee shop, donut shop, or grocery store. You can make your own muffins that don't contain all that fat and sugar, but instead, try eating the healthy breakfasts mentioned above.

Written for Dumb Little Man by Leo Babuata

Monday, December 8, 2008

12 mental creativity exercises to try sometime

From The Happiness Project

Here are Dorothea Brande’s twelve mental exercises. Note: she wrote these in 1936, so you need to adapt of few of them.

  1. Spend an hour each day without saying anything except in answer to direct questions, in the midst of the usual group, without creating the impression that you’re sulking or ill. Be as ordinary as possible. But do not volunteer remarks or try to draw out information.
  2. Think for 30 minutes a day about one subject exclusively. Start with five minutes.
  3. Write a letter without using the words I, me, mine, my.
  4. Talk for 15 minutes a day without using I, me, my, mine.
  5. Write a letter in a “successful” or placid tone. No misstatements, no lying. Look for aspects or activities that can be honestly reported that way.
  6. Pause on the threshold of any crowded room and size it up.
  7. Keep a new acquaintance talking about himself or herself without allowing him to become conscious of it. Turn back any courteous reciprocal questions in a way that your auditor doesn’t feel rebuffed.
  8. Talk exclusively about yourself and your interests without complaining, boasting, or boring your companions.
  9. Cut “I mean” or “As a matter of fact” or any other verbal mannerism out of your conversation.
  10. Plan two hours of a day and stick to the plan.
  11. Set yourself twelve tasks at random: e.g., go twenty miles from home using ordinary conveyance; go 12 hours without food; go eat a meal in the unlikelist place you can find; say nothing all day except in answer to questions; stay up all night and work.
  12. From time to time, give yourself a day when you answer “yes” to any reasonable request.

the contagion of happiness

from a great website http://www.happinessproject.typepad.com/:

One of the best ways to make yourself happy is to make other people happy.One of the best ways to make other people happy is to be happy yourself.

Entire article is about the contagion of happiness - visit her website to see it

Thursday, November 27, 2008

things to remember from magazines I'm throwing away

Websites to check out:

Conversation games to try with the kids:
  • stump the chump
  • mad, sad, glad

Books to maybe read:
  • The Tenth Circle by Jodi Picoult
  • Lorreta Lux' Aperture
  • The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova
  • The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith
  • How Doctors Think by Jerome Groopman
  • Promise Not to Tell by Jennifer McMahon
  • What You Have Left by Will Allison
  • The Canon by Natalie Angier

Products to try:

  • most wearable red: L'Oreal colour juice sheer juice lip gloss in candy apple
  • iBra by Wacoal

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Taking Dramatic Change One Day at a Time

Taking Dramatic Change One Day at a Time
Written by Trent

When I first realized I needed to turn my financial life around, the changes that needed to be made seemed immense. Just thinking about the sheer size of what I needed to do would drag me down and leave me feeling as though it were hopeless.

It was in those moments of seeming hopelessness that I would be at my weakest. I’d try to convince myself that the changes I was trying to make weren’t really working - they weren’t really changing anything at all. And I’d tell myself that I should go back on my positive progress by spending money on things that I didn’t really need.

What got me through those tough moments wasn’t some sort of grand vision of what could be. Instead, it was focusing on the immediate. What actions could I take today? What good choices could I make today? In short, the big success of turning around our debt situation was actually built brick by brick, one day at a time.

It sounds incredibly simple: just focus on today and not worry about tomorrow. The truth, however, is never quite that simple. It’s easy to make short-term choices that make sense - like eating nothing but lettuce for a day when you’re dieting - only to find out that they’re disastrous in the longer term - you’re starving on the fourth day and eat a whole Sara Lee poundcake.

Here are seven vital tactics to use when you’re trying to make a giant change one day at a time.

  • Make your goal for the day very clear and concrete. “I will spend less money today” or “I will eat less today” doesn’t cut the mustard - these goals aren’t specific at all and rely on an imperfect memory of what you spent before or what you ate before. Instead, clarify what exactly you want to do. “I will not spend any money today besides buying groceries or paying bills” or “I will only consume 1,500 calories today” are concrete, measurable goals that have a very clear route to success.
  • Make your goal for the day realistic. When you’re setting that goal, make it realistic. Don’t say, “I’m going to eat nothing today” or “I’m going to improve my net worth by 1% today.” Those goals simply aren’t realistic or attainable. You need to set specific, concrete goals that you can actually reach every day with mental focus and effort. Goals that are beyond the pale will lead directly to failure.
  • Consider the impact beyond just today when choosing your goal. Another thing to consider is whether or not your daily goal is one that will adversely affect your ability to complete goals in future days. For example, if you pledge that you will spend no money at all today, that likely means you’ll just be postponing spending to a future day. Instead, focus on not spending a dollar beyond your budget - or not a dollar on anything extraneous. Similarly, if you’re trying to diet and you set your daily goal too low, you’re begging for a big rebound when under-nutrition catches up with you.
  • Keep a daily journal to mark your progress. Each day, whether you successfully completed the goal or not, spend a moment or two jotting down how things went with regards to your goal that day. Did you achieve what you wanted to achieve? What difficulties did you face? What good ideas did you have? Make this journal a part of your daily routine at the end of the day. In fact, use my wife as an example - part of her pre-bedtime routine is to write in her own paper journal.
  • If you’d prefer to type, you can easily set up a very basic anonymous blog online. This will enable you to record your thoughts and daily progress no matter where you’re at, as long as you have internet access.
  • After several days, note the change that is happening in terms of your bigger goal. After a week or two, recalculate your net worth and see how it compares to when you started. Or, weigh yourself and see if you’ve dropped any pounds. You may find that this simple “focus on one day at a time” tactic is really producing the big changes that you desire. I find it better not to do such measurements every day, because individual days show a lot of fluctuation. Instead, spread out your evaluations of success so that those fluctuations in weight and financial state that happen day-to-day do not impact your impression of how your progress is going.
  • Keep focused on just one day at a time until that one day becomes easy. After a bit of success, it’s easy to think you’ve “got it” and stop worrying about daily goals. Don’t fall into that trap. It’s that very focus on daily goals that has brought you this early success - don’t let go of it now. Instead, you should stick with your daily goals (and recording your progress with them) until the goals become very easy and almost automatic. In effect, what you’re trying to do is change your definition of what “normal” is - and when your new behavior becomes your “normal,” then you’ve really achieved something.

Move on by picking a new daily goal or focusing on longer-term goals. Once you’ve reached the point that you’ve truly altered your normal behavior, it’s time for a bit more soul-searching. You can start looking for a different daily goal to focus on, or you can start looking at things from a bigger scale. In short, look for a new challenge to bring you towards the big dreams you have - don’t rest on the laurels of your early success.
Good luck!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

can't believe it's already november!

I can't believe it's already November, and that my last post was in AUGUST! Needless to say I've been pretty busy since then.

And it's not only November - it's also Election Night! I don't really care too much how it comes out. I think I will be happy with either candidate winning. I guess my problem is that I see the good things about everyone, including political candidates, and I can see a lot of good things about both of them. So either way I win.

I put up my Christmas tree last night. It's not decorated or anything but it's lighted, so it's just a nice piece of glowing greenery in the corner of my living room for me to look at.

Right now I'm multitasking as usual:
  • relaxing with a Mike's Hard Lemonade - yum!
  • waiting for David to get home from work (teaching a class on burglary tonight)
  • downloading light jazz piano mix to my iPod to use tomorrow night at the Etiquette Dinner for work
  • listening to Journey on Pandora
  • blogging
  • keeping an eye on the election results on Fox News
  • cooking dinner (spaghetti with homemade sauce featuring sweet italian sausage, onion and garlic, with roasted yellow squash and zucchini, and eventually some kind of bread -- it's all on hold while I wait for David to get home)
  • nagging Tyler about homework
  • thinking about picking up my cross stitching right after this

Well, I mostly just wanted to put something down here. I should be doing this more often.

Friday, October 10, 2008

letter from the future from Leisl

This is a letter that Leisl wrote to me from the year 1999. Note that the postmark says December 1986, which means that it was sent Senior Year. It's really funny. Click on an image to make it larger to read.



Thursday, August 21, 2008

Tips for living a virtuous life, from Benjamin Frankin in 1793

As he records in his Autobiography, Benjamin Franklin "conceiv'd the bold and arduous Project of arriving at moral Perfection." From his reading, he came up with a catalogue of thirteen moral virtues, and he drew up a graph on which he scored his successes and failures each day.

  1. Temperance. Eat not to Dulness. Drink not to Elevation.
  2. Silence. Speak not but what may benefit others or yourself. Avoid trifling Conversation.
  3. Order. Let all your Things have their Places. Let each Part of your Business have its Time.
  4. Resolution. Resolve to perform what you ought. Perform without fail what you resolve.
  5. Frugality. Make no Expense but to do good to others or yourself: i.e., Waste nothing.
  6. Industry. Lose no time. Be always employ'd in something useful. Cut off all unnecessary Actions.
  7. Sincerity. Use no hurtful Deceit. Think innocently and justly; and if you speak, speak accordingly.
  8. Justice. Wrong none, by doing Injuries or omitting the Benefits that are your Duty.
  9. Moderation. Avoid Extreams. Forbear resenting Injuries so much as you think they deserve.
  10. Cleanliness. Tolerate no Uncleanness in Body, Cloaths, or Habitation.
  11. Tranquility. Be not disturbed at Trifles, or at Accidents common or unavoidable.
  12. Chastity. Rarely use Venery but for Health or Offspring; Never to Dullness, Weakness, or the Injury of your own or another’s Peace or Reputation.
  13. Humility. Imitate Jesus and Socrates.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

fitness goals

It's kind of annoying but here at UAS we have a benefit that is thru the WebMD people where you have a health consultant call you and check in on you periodically. I ignored my scheduled phone call this morning, and then called them back and talked for awhile. I don't mind talking to a stranger about my goals and such, but I like to do it on my own time. Scheduling a time is kind of irrelevant because of my job, and what is going on in my office at the time someone calls. It depends on how private I'm feeling about it and such. Anyway....

These are the goals I set today for the next 8 weeks. I figure if I get them down somewhere then I can try to refer back to it and have it be a reminder that's what I'm supposed to be doing:
Monday thru Friday get 30 minutes of cardio (I plan to walk)
Monday, Wednesday and Friday do the wii fit in the mornings

my husband is the best husband


I was in Safeway for literally 10 minutes at the most, and when I came out this was on my car:

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

generation X

I attended a webinar this morning that talked a lot about the differences between the generations. According to my birth year I fall solidly into "generation x". I have heard a lot of this stuff before, but one thing I thought was interesting was the note about cynicism and distrust of leadership, etc. This rang so true with me. I am very cynical about life in general, work, etc.

From wikipedia:
In the 1991 book Generations, William Strauss and Neil Howe called this generation the "13th Generation" because it's the 13th to know the flag of the United States (counting back to the peers of Benjamin Franklin). Strauss and Howe defined the birth years of the 13th Generation as 1965 to 1982 based on examining peaks and troughs in cultural trends rather than simply looking at birth rates.[5] Howe and Strauss speak of influences that they believe have shaped Generation 13. These influences are as follows:

* Disaffectation with governance, a lack of trust in leadership, particularly institutional leadership
* Rampant political apathy
* Increase in divorce
* Increase in mothers in the workplace
* The zero population growth movement
* Availability of birth control pills
* Increase in educational variance
* Decrease in educational funding and loan availability
* Changed career options require more academic requirements and intellectual skill
* Concerns on environmental destruction and ecological issues
* Inception of the Internet
* The end of the Cold War

Another thing I thought was really interesting was the part of the presentation on Millenials, which is where my own children fall, and all of the students I work with in my job on my boards and in office work in general here at the university. They have grown up in an age of terrorism, which has been prevalent in other areas of the world but not until recently here in the US. They tend to live for the day because tomorrow may not come.

From usa today:
High expectations of self: They aim to work faster and better than other workers.
High expectations of employers: They want fair and direct managers who are highly engaged in their professional development.
Ongoing learning: They seek out creative challenges and view colleagues as vast resources from whom to gain knowledge.
Immediate responsibility: They want to make an important impact on Day 1.
Goal-oriented: They want small goals with tight deadlines so they can build up ownership of tasks.

turning 40 soon

So I'm turning 40 this year in October. I'm wondering if 40 is the magic number when I will suddenly transform into someone who is hell bent on physical self improvement. Because right now it sounds like something I want to do but I just really don't care enough to put it in action.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

FACEBOOK

Hey you guys - get on Facebook ---- me and Paul Sharpe (AKA the cool kids) are on it. www.facebook.com

Monday, June 23, 2008

Pictures of Cora




Here are some photos of Leisl's new baby, Cora.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

august 2 august 2 august 2 !!!

http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/twilight_movie.html

Friday, June 20, 2008

Congratulations Leisl!

Leisl writes: "Introducing Cora! She is a week old today [6/19/08] and as soon as we can get announcements going we'll send one your way."

She included a slideshow but I can't get it off my phone, so we'll have to add photos separately later.

Sissy - spotted!


She writes Chris: "Yes, still alive. At home doing emails before going to work, where I don’t seem to get anything done. William is going into third grade, if you can believe that. I’m working at the medical examiner’s office and the hospital autopsy service, both keeping me way too busy, and I have a hard time saying no. Thanks for the contact. Hope all is well.

Martha"

Thursday, June 12, 2008

10 perfect foods



Saturday, May 31, 2008

16 Ways to Eat Healthy While Keeping it Cheap

Monday, 30th July 2007 (by J.D.) This article is about Food, Frugality, Health & Fitness
This is a guest post by Mehdi, author of StrongLifts.com. If you enjoy this post, check out his site.

Eating healthy is important. Eating healthy:

  • Lowers disease risks
  • Increases productivity
  • Gives you more energy
  • Makes you stronger

You probably think eating healthy is expensive. I’ll be honest — it is. But there are tricks to keep it low cost. Here are sixteen ways to eat more healthy while keeping it cheap.

What is Healthy Food? Before we start, let’s define healthy food. It consists of:
Protein. The building blocks of muscles, needed for strength.
Fat. A balanced intake of omega 3, 6 & 9.
Veggies. All kinds, especially green fibrous veggies.
Fruit. Full of vitamins.
Water. 1 liter per 1000 calories you expend.
Whole grain food. Oats, rice, pasta, breads, …

On with the tips.

  1. Switch to Water. I drank huge amounts of soda daily for more than 15 years. Then I started Strength Training and switched to water:
    It’s healthier
    It’s cheaper
    Quit the soda & drink water. Take a bottle wherever you go.
  2. Consume Tap Water. Check the price of water on your tap water bill. Now check the price of bottled water. Quit a difference, isn’t it? So why are you buying bottled water?
    Cleaner? Not necessarily.
    Better taste? No, simply a matter of Adaptation.
    Bottled water companies get their supply from the same source you do: municipal water systems. It’s like selling ice to Eskimos. If you don’t trust the quality of tap water, filter it yourself. I use a Brita Pitcher. One $7 filter cleans 40 gallons water.
  3. Eat Eggs. I always have eggs at breakfast:
    Full of vitamins
    High in proteins
    Low in price
    Don’t believe the Eggs & Cholesterol myth. Dietary cholesterol is not bound to blood cholesterol. Want to make it cheaper? Buy a chicken.
  4. Eat Fatty Meats. Fatty meats are cheaper & more tasty than lean meats. You think it’s not healthy? Check the Fat Myths:
    Fat doesn’t make you fat, excess calories do
    You need a balanced intake of fats: omega 3, 6 & 9
    I’m on the Anabolic Diet, I buy beef chuck instead of sirloin.
  5. Get Whey. The cheapest source of protein. 70$ for a 10lbs bag lasting 4 months. Nothing beats that. Use whey in your Post Workout Shake to help recovery.
  6. Tuna Cans. Canned tuna is cheap & contains as much protein as meat. Alternate tuna with eggs, meat & whey. You’ll easily get to your daily amount of protein.
  7. Buy Frozen Veggies. I mostly buy frozen veggies:
    Take less time to prepare
    You don’t waste money if not eaten in time
    Can be bought in bulk for discounts & stored in your freezer
    If you can afford fresh veggies, then do it. I go frozen.
  8. Use a Multivitamin. Pesticides lower the vitamin levels of your fruits & veggies. Two solutions:
    Buy organic food. Expensive.
    Use a multivitamin. $10 a month.
    Choose what fits your wallet best. I take the multivitamin.
  9. Fish Oil. Omega-3 is found in fish oil. Benefits of omega-3 consumption include:
    Lowered cholesterol levels
    Decreased body fat
    Reduced inflammation
    You need to eat fatty fish 3 times a week to get these benefits. Time consuming & expensive, I know. Try Carlson’s Liquid Fish Oil with Lemon flavor. One teaspoon daily. You’ll be ok.
  10. Buy Generic Food. The box might be less attractive, it’s certainly more attractive to your wallet. Brand-name food will always be more expensive. You’re paying for the name. Get real. Food is food. Go generic.
  11. Buy in Bulk. Think long-term. Buying in bulk is more expensive at the cashier, but cheaper in the long run:
    Gets you discounts
    Saves time
    Saves car fuel
    Invest in a big freezer. Buy meats & veggies in bulk and freeze them.
  12. Go to One Grocery Store. This grocery store is cheaper for meat, that grocery store is cheaper for veggies, the other grocery store is cheaper for fish… How many grocery stores are you going to, trying to find the cheapest food? Think!
    Time is money. Stop losing a day shopping.
    Cars don’t run on water. Lower your fuel expenses.
    I get all my food in a big grocery store near my place. It hasn’t the cheapest price for all foods, but it saves me time & fuel.
  13. Make a Plan. A classic, but worth repeating. Everything starts with a plan.
    Make a list of what you need
    Eat a solid meal, don’t go hungry
    Go the grocery, get what’s on your list & get out
    No need to take your partner or kids with you. This is not a recreational activity. Just get your food & get back home.
  14. Take Food To Work. Ever counted how much money you throw away buying food at work daily? Start preparing your food for the day on waking up:
    Get up earlier
    Eat a solid breakfast (like Scrambled Eggs)
    Prepare your food for work in the meanwhile
    Total time 30 minutes. No stress during the day about what you’ll be eating & you get healthy food while sparing money.
  15. Eat Less. This one is obvious. The less you eat, the lower your grocery bill. If you’re overweight, get on a diet. Your health & bank account will thank you.
  16. Don’t Buy Junk Food. The last one. Stop buying anything that comes out of a box, it’s:
    Unhealthy
    Expensive
    If you actually find junk food that is cheaper than whole food, think long-term. Health implications.

Mehdi is author of StrongLifts.com, a blog about Strength Training, nutrition, lifestyle & attitude. His articles include the Anabolic Diet & the Beginner Strength Training Program. Join him at StrongLifts.com for the fascinating journey toward more strength, bigger muscles, low body fat & a better health.

quote

"A happy woman is one who has no cares at all; a cheerful woman is one who has cares but doesn't let them get her down."
-- Beverly Sills

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

10 Ways to Stay Organized with SMS/MMS

10 Ways to Stay Organized with SMS/MMS from LifeHack.com
  • Send tasks to your todo list. Many online task managers accept tasks via SMS, usually indirectly (using an intermediate service to “translate”, although Gubb allows tasks to be added directly). For example, I use Twitter to send tasks to my Toodledo list, using a special format: d toodledo [Task] #[Due date] *[Folder]. (E.g. “d toodledo Write a post for Lifehack #5/27 *Lifehack”)
  • Add events to your calendar. Google Calendar allows you to add events via tet message using it’s “natural language” entry method. So you send a text to “GVENT” (48368) saying “Meet Andy at Joe’s Cafe tomorrow at 2:30pm” and Google parses it out and puts it into your calendar. 30 Boxes is also supposed to do this, but I don’t use it enough to be familiar with how. (If you know, tell us how in the comments!)
  • Check your calendar. Using the same “GVENT” number, you can get a summary of your next appointment, your schedule for the day, or tomorrow’s schedule from your Google Calendar, no matter where you are. To get your next event, text “next” to “GVENT”; to get your schedule for the day, text “day”; for tomorrow’s schedule, text “nday”. A text message will be returned with the information you requested.
  • Track your expenses. Everyone knows the key to good budgeting is keeping track of what you spend. This is easier said than done, though, and it’s not helped by the fact that expense tracking is pretty boring. Enter Xpenser, a web-based expense tracker that allows you to submit expenses on the fly via text message. Send the amount, a short description, a keyword for the type of expense, and you’re done. (Note: Users outside of the US and Canada can’t do this directly, but can use Twitter as an intermediary.)
  • Track how you use your time. If you bill by the hour, or if you just recognize that as with money budgeting, time budgeting needs good record-keeping, you can keep track of your time away from the office with text messaging, too. Harvest is an online time tracking service that allows time records to be sent via SMS, using Twitter. You just send a (private) direct message using the following format: d harvest t duration notes. Check out Harvest’s instructions for more details. Incidentally, if Xpensr doesn’t turn you on, Harvest also does expense tracking.
  • Keep a food diary. Whether you’re trying to lose a few pounds or just want to eat a healthier diet, a food diary can be a useful tool. Tweet What You Eat uses Twitter to track your food intake: eat, tweet, move on with your life.
  • Track gas usage and mileage. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but gasoline prices are up a bit this year. Tracking your mileage is a good way to identify problems that are making your car run less efficiently. Two new services allow you to record mileage at the pump: My Milemarker and FuelFrog both let you use Twitter to send reports from the pump. For FuelFrog, send an “@” message to @fuelfrog with the miles driven, price, and gallons (in either Imperial or metric); for My Milemarker, you send a direct message like this: “D mymm [miles] [gallons] [price]“.
  • Scan documents and whiteboards. Two services — ScanR and Qipit — will take photos sent via MMS from your phone, clean them up, and send you nicely formatted PDF documents. If your phone’s camera is high enough resolution (over 2 megapixels), ScanR will even run OCR (optical character recognition) to pull out the text!
    Get directions. Feeling lost? Send the address of your start point and destination to “GOOGLE” (466453) and Google will send you directions! Note: You may receive more than one text message in return, depending on the length of your trip.
  • Send email. That you can send text messages to email addresses is often forgotten. Just replace the phone number with an email address. There are a lot of services that don’t take text messages but will accept emails. How about sending article ideas to your Google Docs account? Sending notes and even pictures to Evernote? Sending an address to yourself to cut-and-paste into your contact manager? Or telling your cell-phone-phobic mom that you love her (awwww…)?

Monday, May 26, 2008

Toxic water bottles?

In addition to the sites published in my previous blog, I found this information. Basically, the article I took this from said that it's good to be wary of plastics, but that nothing has been proven in humans. Personally, I think precaution is a good thing... and there are greener alternatives to plastic bottles:

Safeguards for the plastic-wary

  • Don't microwave; use glass or microwavable ceramic.
  • Avoid fatty and acidic foods and hot foods/drink.
  • Don't wash in dishwasher or in extremely hot water.
  • Don't clean with bleaches or harsh detergents.
  • Don't reuse single-use plastic products (i.e., No. 1 water bottles, plastic ware).
  • Discard products with visible wear (i.e., scratches, cracks, opaque tint).
  • Don't use plastic wrap in the microwave.

Why polycarbonate?
The main attribute of polycarbonate plastic is its toughness (i.e. sports, toddlers, etc.)

Dangers:
If the plastic bond begins to break down, the BPA in the cup can leach into the contents of the bottle, possibly leaching at a higher rate if the juice is highly acidic. Whether the chemicals in Junior's next swig can have a long-term effect on him is not certain, but some studies suggest a possible connection with behavior and neurological problems, including hyperactivity.

Precautions:
Although the polycarbonate bond is extremely strong, some studies suggest exposure to high-heat (dishwashers, hot drinks, microwaves) can dramatically increase leaching. Regulatory agencies still assure that the increased BPA levels seen in such studies are safe.

Memorial Day Weekend and Number 7 bottles

Had a great weekend. Worked at UAS Community Day on Saturday, split the shift with Deana. It was actually pretty fun. We gave away a lot of leftover T-shirts, but did not give away our leftover water bottles because the sustainability people in the booth next to us said we could not give away toxic number 7 bottles (and then she walked away and lit a cigarette). Some articles:

Other than that it was a good day.

Then on Sunday we invited people over to have turkey, yes turkey. Here in Juneau we are in the midst of an electrical energy crisis, and we are doing everything we can to conserve electricity to help keep our bills down. We wanted to turn off our extra freezer but in order to do so had to empty it out somewhat. Among other things in our freezer was a 20# turkey. We deep fried it outside and had a potluck. It was delicious, but took longer than we had expected to get ready.

Today we slept in pretty late, then David worked in the yard and I did a little work inside the house. We went to stupidtown (walmart) and then to Superbear and bought a hanging basket to put on the hook that hangs from the awning over our hot tub (and right outside our kitchen window) and then McDonalds. Then we came home and Tyler had a guitar lesson, while I stayed home and sunbathed (with baby oil----- I know, bad) and now I'm just doodling around on my computer.

The Dinner Dash - combination of previous listings

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

week of 3/31 countdown to vacation!
Sunday we had the Neely's lasagna - I was missing an ingredient - tomato sauce! I thought I had it so I didn't purchase it at the store. Alas, I didn't have it, so I substituted ketchup (shh!). It still turned out really good. David REALLY likes it!Monday we had tomato/polenta soup and grilled chicken caesar salad. It wasn't as good as I had hoped this time. I used the Safeway tomato bisque soup, and it was actually kind of spicy. Also, I did not crumble the polenta, I cut it in cubes, and decided I like it better with crumbled polenta. Today is Tuesday and tonight we are going to have Chicken/Rice Bake. At lunch time I went home and got the casserole all ready, and left instructions for Cody to turn on the oven and put it in at 5 PM so that it is done about 6 PM. I even set up the rice cooker with plain white rice for Cody to turn on at that time as well.I have menus in place for the rest of the days between now and Saturday night. Cody and I leave for Spokane on Sunday, and David and Tyler leave on Monday. Really looking forward to some different food while in Spokane.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 2:29 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, March 26, 2008

the week so far
OK here we go:Sunday: Dinner at the Johnsons - pizza on the grill.... excellent recipe Lynne learned from Ramekins cooking school in California (and too much wine).Monday: Steak (that had been marinating since Saturday nite.... too tired then to make it, then forgot about going to the Johnson's on Sunday, but was REALLY good) grilled outside, baked potatoes and fresh asparagus steamed in the microTuesday: Salmon (caught fresh, vacuum-sealed & frozen right away last summer), my own special rice (with peppers and onions, cooked in chicken broth), and fresh broccoli steamed in the microWednesday: Tonight we are having pork chops (not sure how to prepare yet), corn on the cob, and something else (to be determined). Maybe some bread, too.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 5:21 PM 0 comments
Tuesday, March 18, 2008

dinner after car shop frustration
This is what dinner looks like when you're mad at the service dept:
deli roasted chicken from Safeway (warm and ready to go)
Country Crock macaroni & cheese (5 min in the microwave)
broccoli (steamed in the microwave)
Just me and Cody so far... David got called into work and Tyler is supposed to be home soon.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 7:56 PM 0 comments
Saturday, March 15, 2008

regroup
It's Saturday and I have spent the last 2 days being very naughty. I can't recall what the trigger was but I really blew it nutritionally and diet-wise the last 2 days. The things I couldn't stop eating:
Chips and Salsa - once you start you can't stop
McFlurry with M&M's - even the small one is too much
In fact, I was so bad, that was my meal yesterday for dinner. Pathetic. Oh well. I weighed myself this morning and really only gained back 2 pounds, so this is a manageable setback. I decided that perhaps I was being a little bit too stringent with my diet and the way I was thinking about food. I am following Weight Watchers Flex Plan and the basic idea is that I have 21 points each day, with 35 points to use as I see fit throughout the week. That is totally do-able. I think what I need to do, though, is really try to save my extra points for the weekend.
Anyhow... Dinner tonight is frozen pizza, but we always add things to our frozen pizzas:
Pepperoni Pizza with black olives added
Cheese pizza for Cody
Canadian bacon pizza with pineapple added
and I also bought a California Pizza Kitchen BBQ pizza, but I probably won't make that one tonight
Tomorrow I may try a really cool recipe I found on the Internet for Guinness Stout Beef Stew. I will be traveling all day on St. Patrick's Day, so this will be our early celebration.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 3:39 PM 1 comments
Monday, March 3, 2008

pasta night
Still on the plan, going good. Monday is always pasta night in our house. Here's the menu tonight:
Mama Neely's Lasagna - I usually make my homemade lasagna with jarred spaghetti sauce, sometimes enhanced with italian sausage. Today I tried a new recipe from one of my new favorite shows Down Home with the Neelys on Food Network. I linked the recipe title to the website.
Bag o' Salad with tomatoes and cucumber
garlic bread
Posted by Keni Lynn at 8:12 PM 1 comments

Sunday - back on the plan
pulled out my menus with WW points. Here's what we had tonight:
Marinated broiled pork chops - I went on the internet to look for a marinade and foudn this one that was excellent: http://www.mccormick.com/recipedetail.cfm?id=10840
Couscous - made with chicken broth, shredded zucchini, carrots and yellow squash
Sauteed veggies - Zucchini, carrots, yellow squash
It was really good.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 8:05 PM 0 comments
Sunday, March 2, 2008

Lost catch up night!
We made Red Baron frozen pizzas - pepperoni and black olives, cheese, and hawaiian.Easy peasy.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 12:46 PM 0 comments
Older Posts

Negative me

Negative Me
A place to write about things that I need to get out of my head, but don't necessarily want to share with (or bore) anyone else.

OK - I decided to include this in my combination of all of my blogs. I was worried there might be something in there that I would be judged poorly by, but I don't care, and I don't think anything here is all that negative anyway:

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

stupid teleconferences
I can't believe I have to meet with this group weekly. This is so stupid.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 2:28 PM 0 comments
Friday, March 14, 2008

Develop clean-house habits one at a time
Try these habits for at least two weeks each before going onto the next:

  • hang your clothes up or put them in hamper immediately
  • put all papers (including school papers, post-in notes, bills, etc) in one in basket, and process at the end of each day (use the steps in Clearing Your Desk)
  • keep your sink clean and shiny (wash dishes immediately, clean sink after)
  • pick up before you go to bed and before you leave the house
  • empty your trash daily
  • 15 minutes decluttering sessions each day (see How to Declutter)
  • clean your shower, toilet and bathroom sink after each use (only takes a couple minutes!)
  • have a place for everything, and put everything in its place immediately
  • make your bed each morning
  • keep flat surfaces (counters, tables, desks) clear of clutter
  • put away your stuff as soon as you get home
    Posted by Keni Lynn at 9:37 PM 0 comments

MIT: Most Important Tasks
Purpose Your Day: Most Important Task (MIT)from zenhabits.netI’ve mentioned this briefly in my morning routine, but I thought I’d explain a little bit more about MITs - Most Important Tasks. It’s not an original concept, but one that I use on a daily basis and that has helped me out tremendously.

It’s very simple: your MIT is the task you most want or need to get done today. In my case, I’ve tweaked it a bit so that I have three MITs — the three things I must accomplish today. Do I get a lot more done than three things? Of course. But the idea is that no matter what else I do today, these are the things I want to be sure of doing. So, the MIT is the first thing I do each day, right after I have a glass of water to wake me up.And here’s the key to the MITs for me: at least one of the MITs should be related to one of my goals. While the other two can be work stuff (and usually are), one must be a goal next-action. This ensures that I am doing something to move my goals forward that day.

And that makes all the difference in the world. Each day, I’ve done something to make my dreams come true. It’s built into my morning routine: set a next-action to accomplish for one of my goals. And so it happens each day, automatically.

Another key: do your MITs first thing in the morning, either at home or when you first get to work. If you put them off to later, you will get busy and run out of time to do them. Get them out of the way, and the rest of the day is gravy!It’s such a small thing to implement, and yet I’m raving about it like it’s a huge revelation. But it is. Sometimes small things can make big differences. I highly recommend you give it a go.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 8:45 PM 0 comments

Monday, February 18, 2008

hmm... my horoscope today... sounds like my last several days
Libra
September 22 - October 22This may be a tough day for you emotionally. It may surprise you to find that some very old deep-seated emotions get churned up in the course of your investigating a subject of keen interest to you. It may be difficult to process these feelings. Don't try to over intellectualize them, dear Libra. At the same time be wary of situations that could trigger an emotional cyclone for you. Some words, once they get in the air, can be brutally hurtful. Try to avoid this at all costs.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 8:51 PM 0 comments
Saturday, February 2, 2008

Wish List
New Pots & Pans

Grill Pan

Gas Stove
Posted by Keni Lynn at 4:13 PM 0 comments
Monday, January 14, 2008

goals update
Mental Wellness Goals:
Stop reading and caring about celebrities - I'm not really doing too good with this one. I am just fascinated by Britney Spears and her life derailing. I'm also somewhat obsessed with celebrity's babies.
Become more aware of the world and REAL STUFF - I've been trying to pay a little more attention to politics, since we have an election coming up. I'm trying to identify with the republican candidates, but really I'm having a hard time identifying with anyone in politics regardless of their affiliation. I also have a hard time following the war. My gut reactions tell me we need to get out of there, but I really don't know why we are there in the first place anyway.
Read more - I actually read quite a bit. I'm not sure why this goal is here. Currently I'm wavering between the two books that Lynne bought me for Xmas. I think I'll like both, I just need to dive in.
Do hobbies more - My current cross-stitch project is the re-do of the Forebears. I'm making one for my mom and one for my sister. I had set a goal to do one bear per night, but haven't been doing it. Mostly because I've been typing for Beth. But, maybe I need to set a slightly smaller goal of one bear's color per night. I also want to start painting, as does David, but he hasn't started yet, and I don't want to open up his stuff without him getting a chance to do it first.

Household Goals:
Eat dinner at the table more often - we ate dinner at the table last night, and a couple times last week. Not doing it as much as I had planned yet, but again that has to do with covering for Beth.
have a better cleaning routine - I've been pretty good with this. I'm trying to do things as I see them needing to be done. I really need to incorporate a vacuuming routine.
have people over for dinner more often - haven't done this yet but really need to. I want to have Lynne & Lloyd over, but their travel schedules have been prohibitive
have kids cook dinner and help with meal planning - Tyler cooked last week and so did Cody. I don't really have them in the schedule this week, though, mostly because we are traveling this weekend.

Health and Personal Care Goals:
Follow beauty routine regularly - I haven't been very good about this. I've been washing my face, but haven't been good about using clarifier or moisturizer, unless I obviously need it.
floss every day - I have not been good with this.
keep up with highlights - I had my hair done yesterday and I have an appointment made for a touch-up on February 17.
eat better - include more healthy stuff, exclude more unhealthy stuff - I've been so-so with this. Right now I'm focusing on drinking a glass of milk with each meal to get my 3 servings.
avoid eating after dinner - start drinking herbal tea instead - I haven't done very well with this most days. I'm still having a homemade wine cooler after dinner instead of tea. I can do better.
walk and move more in general - stop being so lazy! - I've been trying to consciously not be so lazy, relying on kids to get stuff from downstairs, etc. I've been trying to run my own errands. I've been flirting with the idea of parking as far away from the office as I can, but haven't actually followed through yet.
get to the gym at least 3 times per week - have NOT been doing this, mostly because of typing for Beth. Plan to go the rest of this week, and then when I get back from Las Vegas (maybe even while I'm in Vegas - but not silly enough to expect that I will).

Financial Goals:
Keep up with financial spreadsheet daily - I have been doing AWESOME with this
stop buying magazines - not so good with this. I like magazines, darn it!
pay down credit cards and work towards paying them OFF - trying, at least have a decent way to track it now, but not really paying off yet. Beth says she would welcome someone helping her on weekends, etc. so maybe I can dedicate income from that towards paying off bills.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 12:51 PM 0 comments

it's early on a Monday morning
I didn't expect to be up this early, but thanks to the weather and Alaska Airlines, Beth didn't make it back, so here I am once again, up early early typing. It's all good, though, because this is all Las Vegas money.A few cool things I don't want to forget to check out... I clipped this out of Women's Health magazine.A food journal that might help with dieting caloriecount.about.com.this person's tips on weight loss:
Eat your treats. Small portions of your favorite foods every day.
Have a daily goal (i.e. Today I will run 3 miles, or 20 minutes or whatever).
Take a day off. You need the mental and physical break.Don't lose your digi-goods... recommended using a USB flash drive to back up entire contents of laptop/computer every so often. luminosity.comfor daiy games developed by researchers in neuroscience (yikes... just noticed it's $10 per month -- not su re it's worth that)animoto.comcan turn digital photo slide show into a "mini-flick" with music in the backgroundbighugelabs.com --- isn't this what Cody used to do his project magazine cover?flickr.com - can do a DIY E-cardCool!

Work Blog - previous postings

I'm in the process of combining my previous blogs all into one. These were previously in my blog "Work Blog":


Cringe-Busting your TODO list
by Merlin Mann May 23 2005

As I’ve said before, items can sometimes linger on your TODO list a lot longer than you’d like, and it can be tricky to understand exactly why that is in each case. I’m convinced cringing is often a factor.

Being that it’s Monday, and a lot of us are planning this week’s activities, why not join me in a modest exercise.

  • Print out your TODO list (alphabetically, if possible)
  • Read it over—beginning to end
  • Go back and circle each item that makes you cringe, or that causes you some kind of existential angst
  • Per cringe item, think honestly about why you’re freaked out about it. Seriously. What’s the hang-up? (Fear of failure? Dreading bad news? Angry you’re already way overdue?)
  • Now, again, per cringe item, add a new TODO that will a) make the loathsome task less cringe-worthy, or b) just get the damned thing done
  • Cross the original cringe items off your list
  • Work immediately on the new, cringe-busting TODO

If you could do this for just one item on your TODO list today, wouldn’t you be a little better off? Is there a quick call you could make, a draft you could edit, an email you could return, or some other piddling 2-minute task that would plane some cringe off of your hated tasks?

Imagine if you did this today for five items on your list. Now imagine you began each Monday with a Cringe Bust. Might be a handy way to pick off old items and let some unnecessary anxiety out of your working week.

(For extra credit, find the item on your list that’s been making you cringe for the longest. Anybody else turning up items that have been inducing cringes for over a month? Ouch. I suck.)


The real tooth-grinders for me...
Submitted by Brad (not verified) on May 24, 2005 - 1:20am.
The real tooth-grinders for me are always phone calls. I’ll email and fax and send carrier pigeons all day, but for some reason I just don’t like the phone - talking to people that way, rather than face-to-face (which I find generally pleasant) or textually (which I find more efficient) is just a put-off for me.

Sadly, not everyone in my life does email.

I’m not sure how to restate the Next Action “call Fred” to be less cringe-inducing, but I do have success with having a dedicated phone call night, where I get through as many as I can in one sitting, just to have them out of the way.

I think that's actually a...
Submitted by Merlin Mann on May 24, 2005 - 1:50am.
I think that’s actually a pretty good example, Brad —and FWIW, I’m with you on phone calls.
You might try something like:

  • List 3 things to go over with Fred
  • Read over Fred’s last email
  • Prepare pre-emptive fake interruption in order to get off call with Fred
  • Google Fred for embarrassing life details whose mention might keep call short

But, seriously, I know what you mean. Some cringers you just have to hold your nose and jump. Sometimes it helps to focus on the next two or three non-horrible things you can work on when the cringer is cleared away.

I just stumbled upon something...
Submitted by oldtimey (not verified) on May 25, 2005 - 9:18pm.
I just stumbled upon something similar … recently I was staring at my ever-growing task-list. “Which of these tasks do I hate the most?” I wondered, and then decided to label one: WORST. (I had to call a company back about an incorrect bill — I’d already paid it, but I was just hating the idea of trying to explain this to them.)

Then I stared at the WORST task, and all the other ones there. Within five minutes I had picked up the phone and made the call. For some reason, once I’d deemed one (but only one) action to be the absolutely most-dreaded thing possible, it took the mystique out of it! It just didn’t hold any power over me anymore.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

The jist of Getting Things Done
What’s it about?This is the best capsule description of the book that I’ve come across, far better than anything I could have come up with. David Allen, the author of the book, describes Getting Things Done as follows:Get everything out of your head. Make decisions about actions required on stuff when it shows up — not when it blows up. Organize reminders of your projects and the next actions on them in appropriate categories. Keep your system current, complete, and reviewed sufficiently to trust your intuitive choices about what you’re doing (and not doing) at any time.Basically, Getting Things Done has one overall guiding principle: write down the stuff you need to do as you think of it, then process that list when you have open time. If you have ongoing projects, keep a list or a folder for that project and check on it regularly to keep it going. That’s the nutshell of it - the book goes on to show examples of how it works and add some detail for specific situations, but that’s really all there is to Getting Things Done.
Posted by Keni Lynn at 11:01 AM 0 comments

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

how to recruit a small army
Kind of in a productivity / GTD / organization / zen kick right now. Decided to start a blog for things that will be useful for work. First one is from The Art of NonConformity about How to Recruit a Small Army -- when I first read it I thought of my children and housework, but the more I read I thought about the Student Alumni Association. But I guess it could be used for any cause, and in addition UAS Alumni & Friends.

Food & Fitness - previous postings

I'm in the process of combining my previous blogs all into one. These were previously in my blog "Food & Fitness":


How To Kill Your Addictions to Junk Food and Soda Pop
Written on 5/20/2008 by Garrett Whelan who writes about cooking for men or anyone trying to kick the fast food habit at FatBastardEats.com.

How can you kick junk food to the curb? Many of us have tried and failed, and tried and failed, and tried and ended up binging on Big Macs blended with ice cream, etc...What we usually do is say, "After this bucket of KFC Chicken, I'm not eating this crap anymore!" Then we purge our house of all things sugary, we eat salads and whole wheat for about 3 days and then cave in the first time we drive past a Taco Bell. Where is the will power, the drive, the ambition you had a couple days ago?That's because we try to stop eating junk food without thinking about it - without planning our escape. What we should do is worry about changing our habits. As Leo Babauta mentioned over at Zen Habits, forging new habits takes time and energy. If we want to kick our junk food habits we'll have to give both. That's why we're going to:

  • only change one habit at a time
  • give each change at least 2 weeks to become ingrained. After all, we've spent years building up these habits, we can't expect to take them down overnight. We'll do it smart, slow and consistent and we'll kick junk food to the curb.
  • I'm going to separate the tasks into kicking crap snacks, kicking fast food and kicking pop (soda to you philistines).
  • Pick whichever will be easiest for you and do that first. A taste of success is incredibly motivating.
  • Then do the one that will be hardest second while you're on an upswing.

Kick the Pop Habit

This one's probably the simplest. Not the easiest, but the simplest. You just keep downgrading every 2-4 weeks. Essentially switching terrible habits for bad and then switching bad for good.

  • Regular -to- Diet: First switch from regular to diet pop and leave it at that for at least 2 weeks. I know that some people say diet is just as bad as regular but we don't want to be fighting our caffeine addiction at the same time we're fighting our sugar addiction. Remember we want to change habits in stages to have the highest chance of success.
  • Diet -to- Caffeine Free Diet: If you do have a caffeine addiction this is where you'll find out. You're going to have about 3 days of feeling like a hangover mouth tastes while your body breaks the physical addiction. But stay on it for the full 2 weeks, we don't want to change too much too fast.
  • Caffeine Free Diet -to- Flavored Water/Water: Now we're moving into healthy territory. If you can't stand drinking water I'm not going to lecture you. Just drink the flavored water with 0 calories they have now, it's just as good(if you don't mind paying for it). If you want you can use that as a jumping off point to regular water but either way you should be loosing weight and feeling better than when you were drinking pop.

Kick Fast Food

How do we beat crack for the single male? Yes, that's how hooked people are on this. How about this:

  • Start by saving all your fast food receipts for one week
  • Now, place a jar by your bedEach night, empty your pants, wallet, or purse of all the fast food receipts.
  • At the end of one week, you can add them all up and get a pretty good idea of how much you're spending on this crap. Round that up to the nearest $10 and cut it in half. That's how much you'll spend a week from now on.
  • Take that money and put it in a ziplock bag that you keep in your car. All your fast food will be paid for out of this fund, and when it dries up, that's it until next week. This will force you to ration and make choices.Let it sink in for 2 weeks and don't forget to plan this out.
  • Something has to replace all that fast food you're suddenly not eating. I suggest: Keep something in your car to eat on the way home from work, like an apple or some nuts - something filling and always ready. Have some frozen meals ready at home so you never wonder what you're going to eat tonight. If you can't make them yourself on the weekend, try those frozen skillets - something balanced and quick.
  • Then, when this new habit is a part of you, cut that dollar amount again, and again, and again until you're happy with how much (how little) fast food you're eating. I think under $10 a week is OK for most people.

Kick Crap Snacks

  • The first step to kicking crappy snack foods is doing a food inventory. What do you have in your kitchen? Cookies, chips, candy? And what are you eating them for? Which are your comfort food? Stress foods?
  • Then we're going to make a chart of all these snacks and for each one list a replacement snack. For example instead of potato chips you could eat tortilla chips with salsa. Now you can switch a crappy snack for it's healthier replacement. But no more than one every two weeks (pacing). Make yourself eat the new food daily so it becomes a part of your lifestyle and remember to snack before you get hungry.

It's a pretty straight forward process but here's a few tips to make it go smoother:

  • If you have a craving for a crap snack that you absolutely have to give in to, buy an individual portion or eat just enough to satisfy your craving and throw out the rest. Keeping it around is crap-snack sabotage.
  • If you have a sweet tooth, proportion something into bites and eat them after a healthy snack. For example cut a snickers bar into 8ths and keep each individually wrapped in the freezer, then eat one after you've filled up on popcorn. That gives you that sweet taste without having to fill up that sweet crap.
  • The three keys to kicking junk food are planning, pacing and sticking to it.Remember to take as long as you need to get these new habits ingrained, 2 weeks is a minimum. Better junk food free in 1 year than relapsing in 6 months.
    Posted by Keni Lynn at 11:00 PM 0 comments
    Tuesday, March 18, 2008

    excuses excuses
    There will always be roadblocks if I allow them to be.
    Posted by Keni Lynn at 11:03 PM 0 comments
    Saturday, February 16, 2008

    hard time and two goals for tomorrow
    I need to get back on track. I am sure that once I do, and get into a routine, my mood will improve. I have been really down lately. I have been sluggish and crabby and sleepy. My goal for tomorrow is to get to the gym. It doesn't matter what I do, but I need to get there.I met with Stephanie with the WIN program at the university. I have goals for the next 2 weeks to get to the gym today. Didn't do that, obviously, but I WILL go tomorrow. Another goal is to get back with my WW plan, using the menus that I had already created previously. And the third goal was to take the kids to the gym on the weekends only, and teach Cody how to do some fitness routines at home.So my second goal will be to get those menus out and get groceries to start the plan. Right now I am going to go to the WW site and change from core plan to flex plan. I think that will work better for me. I don't like having things off limits.
    Posted by Keni Lynn at 9:52 PM 0 comments
    Tuesday, January 15, 2008

    Tuesday, January 15, David's Birthday
    vanilla yogurt with pumpkin flaxseed granola cereal2 chocolatesbowl of vegetable beef soupfishy crackers1 cup milk1 can mountain dew1 bowl tortilla soup1 brownie1 scoop dulce du leche ice cream1 cup milk
    Posted by Keni Lynn at 11:19 PM 0 comments
    Monday, January 14, 2008

    Monday, January 14
    Class of ice water with orange squeezed into itHalf a cup of coffee with creamerVanilla yogurt and pumpkin flaxseed granola cerealnordstrom truffle1 and 1/4 slices thai chicken pizza from Pizzeria Roma1 cup of milknordstrom trufflehalf a diet pepsi2 slices hawaiian pizza1 cup milkhalf a big bowl of popcorn with parmesan cheese2 glasses of wine with sprite

Saturday, May 17, 2008

My turtle candy recipe

Turtles


 

72 pecan halves

24 caramel candies

1 tsp shortening

1 package (6 ounces) chocolate chips (white or milk)


 

Heat oven to 300

Cover cookie sheet with foil or parchment paper

For each candy form a Y shape

Place one caramel in the center of each Y shape

Bake for 6 minutes (or until caramel is melted over the pecans)

Use microwave to melt chocolate and shortening (1 minute, then stir, then 1 more minute then stir)

Place one spoonful of chocolate over each candy

Allow to harden in a cool place (not refrigerator)


 

Friday, March 28, 2008

woo hoo!

taxes are filed!
another monkey off my back!

Thursday, March 27, 2008

ode to pat benatar

when I was growing up I loved everything pat benatar did. lately in my car i have been listening to her on CD and just shuffling the songs so I'm surprised each time with a new memory.

a place for all kinds of weird things

this is a place for weird things that pop into my head and collections of things I find on the internet that I think are neat and that other people might like too.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008


Monday, February 11, 2008

Not Bad 10 Years Later






The Birth of the VWFC






What do '80s neckties have in common with '80s high school students?