Writing

the 5 Best Free Stock Photo Websites

Good stock photos are hard to find. A recent Clients from Hell post reminded me, suddenly, of how many times I've struggled to find stock photos that fit the bill and didn't veer too far into cheesiness. Sometimes it seems like clients expect a magical website with every photo ever taken, for free, that includes every element they need. Strangely, that's not how the real world works. 

I'm a big fan of using "pretty, emotion-inducing" photos for posts. I'm not big on a lot of text or of super obvious pictures that I haven't taken myself. I've really gotten into finding the best stock photos recently and I thought I'd share some of my favorite sites. 

1. Creative Market

Creative Market is a great place to find good stock photos, as well as other creative materials (including fonts and vector images), for sale. They offer weekly free deals, which usually include a stock photography package. The photo above is from the currently available Hipsta package. 

2. Death to Stock Photo

Death to Stock Photo is an incredibly popular site that offers free, monthly stock photo packages. You can also sign up for pro, which offers you even more photos and benefits. They have sent me easily some of my favorite stock photos; they are all beautiful, well-lit, and evocative. 

3. Life of Pix

Need nature photography? Life of Pix is one of the best sites for great nature and landscape photography, if you're looking for something basic and simple. Their website is simple and beautiful. 

4. Picjumbo

My favorite thing about Picjumbo is that many of their photos include people and technology -- two elements that I often look for in stock photogs. They have a variety of photographers as well, which means they offer a variety of styles and feels. Their site is easily divided into categories -- technology, people, bokeh (if you're looking for something abstract and colorful). As a warning, their website has a lot of ads, but don't let that stop you from appreciating the photography. 

5. Magdeleine

Magdeleine has some absolutely stunning still life and abstract photos, as well as a vast collection of nature and landscape photography. Their photos are definitely more atmospheric and moody, perfect for a deep or reflective post. I love their still life photos for DIY posts or newsletters. 

The Best Book I Read in January: "Life After Life," by Kate Atkinson

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When I first wrote my list of 100 books I wanted to read in 2015, I included a few books I'd been wanting to read for months. One of those books was Kate Atkinson's Life After Life

I'd repeatedly carried Life After Life around book stores, put it in my Amazon shopping cart, and read reviews. I'd thought about reading it a lot, but something always stopped me. To be completely honest, I think I was put off by the cover: there is something overly sappy about it, as if it will be a bad romance novel. I'm not a huge fan of novels that are epic, sweeping romance dramas. I just find them a bit boring. I want more from my novels. 

This past weekend, I found myself looking at a few blissful hours of alone time. Danny was sick and had homework to do; I'd cleaned the house, done the laundry, washed the bedding. With so many hours, I didn't want to just sit and watch TV. I spent a way-too-stressful hour looking at my book list and reading reviews on Amazon. 

Twice, I settled on Life After Life and changed my mind. Finally, I bit the bullet and bought the book, sending it to my Kindle. 

I had read reviews, sure, but I wasn't 100% aware of the big plot point until I started reading the book.  I'll get to that in a second though. 

I read Life After Life in two days. That in itself is not an endorsement: I can read most books in two days, one day if I really dedicate myself to it. However, I found myself talking about Life After Life constantly. The first thing I said to Danny about the book was: "I wish I'd thought of it." What did I say after I read Tony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See? "I wish I'd thought of that title, it is killer. Also I wish I could steal his ability to use similes." 

My ringing endorsement is usually the sentiment of "I wish I'd written this; I'm mad that I didn't." 

Life After Life is built around the premise that Ursula Todd is stuck in a time loop: every time she dies, she starts over again. Sometimes, things are different from the very start; in most versions, her mother gives birth alone, her father searching France for her runaway aunt, Izzie. In one version, her father makes it back in time and they raise Izzie's son, Roland, as their own. In a few versions, Ursula dies at birth, or is born dead, or is suffocated by a cat named Queenie (an old wives' tale come to life). Either way, Ursula gets a lot of chances, but the reader is unsure if Ursula is ever 100% aware of her past experiences. 

There are a few events that suggest Ursula is able to tell change what happened. In one version of her life, Ursula drowns as a child while on vacation; the next go around, she becomes terrified to go near the water and her sister pulls her along anyway. She is saved by a man sitting on the beach painting. 

In another version, Ursula's horrible brother, Maurice, throughs her doll out the window; she dies falling off the roof trying to retrieve it. The next time around, her sister, Pamela, uses a stick to pull the doll inside. 

In these small instances, Ursula was filled with dread when approaching the situation: the doll on the ledge, the water's edge. She doesn't really remember, but she knows something is about to happen. As she gets older, if she does get older in that life, she identifies feelings of extreme deja vu, as if she's lived everything before (which, if you buy that she really is living life after life, she has). 

There are other instances where you wonder how aware Ursula is of her past lives. In one life, she is assaulted by one of her brother's friends, Howie; she gets pregnant, has an illegal abortion, and almost dies. The black sheep of the family, she ends up marrying an abusive man and is ultimately beaten to death. In her next life, she doesn't seem aware of Howie's future behavior, but at their first meeting, she promptly punches him in the face. 

In some versions of history, her next door neighbor, Nancy, is murdered while out looking for leaves for a scrapbook; Ursula usually takes another route home, or a detour, in order to intercept Nancy and save her. We don't know how much she knows she's doing this. She just... does it. However, in one version, Ursula is distracted by her crush and Nancy is murdered. Chance didn't work out in that version, I guess. 

The most interesting part of the story is this: Ursula never marries in any of her lives, except two. In one, she marries the man who ultimately beats her to death. In the other, she goes to Germany on a world tour and ends up staying in Germany, marrying a man, and having her daughter, Frieda. In other versions of her life, she never has children. But when she has Frieda, she ends up having to kill her daughter and herself and start over again; she never stays in Germany again, never meets her husband again. It is almost as if Ursula purposefully chooses to never have a child, because she knows in that version of history, her child always dies. 

It might sound boring to read the same life over and over again -- and there are definitely parts where it becomes a little too hint-hint, nudge-nudge -- but it is also incredibly engrossing. Ursula's panic and confusion over her moments of deja vu, her sense of knowing what will happen before it actually does, her grappling with reality is intense. Beyond that, the book paints the idea that sometimes the most important connections in life aren't romantic: Ursula's love stories are few and far between. Instead, the relationship between siblings is examined and poked: the things we do to save our siblings, to make them happy, to keep them from pain. 

In several versions of history, the Todd family maid, Bridget, attend Armistice Day celebrations in London and brings the Spanish Flu back to the Todd home, killing Ursula; in another version, Ursula manages to stay away from Bridget, only for her little brother, Edward, to get sick and die. Over and over again, Ursula struggles to find a way to not just save herself, but to save her siblings; and, it is interesting to note, she is never once concerned with saving Bridget's life. Her ultimate solution is to push Bridget down the stairs, breaking her arm, and, in later versions, to tell Bridget that she'd seen her boyfriend cheating on her. Both work to save the family. 

It makes me wonder what moments would stand out in my life if I were to live it over and over again. What things would I change? What would I do differently? The best kind of novel is one that makes you think deeply about your life and your choices -- and Life After Life does just that.

When (and Why) Did I Start Expecting Bad Customer Service?

Hi, I recently purchased a China Glaze brand nail polish set at the Keizer, OR store. One of the minis in the set was dried out. I don’t live close enough to exchange the set, and was hoping I could have a new one sent to me. (I’d be willing to send the new set out immediately.) Below you’ll find a scanned copy of my receipt and a picture of the dried out polish (“My Way or the Highway”). Thanks!

That's the email I sent to Ulta on Saturday evening. I had spent the afternoon with my mom, making a trip to Ulta to pick up new primer and a few treats. When I finally got around to playing with my new nail polishes, I immediately realized that one was beyond use -- it was goopy and dried. Hilariously, it was the color I'd actually bought the set for! I was disappointed and a bit panicked -- what should I do? 

Ulta has always struck me as a huge company that might have very, very poor customer service. I don't know what gave me that impression, but they struck me as a cold, impersonal company (versus a store like Sephora, that seems enthusiastic and passionate). I've had a lot of customer service dealings in the last few years and very few of them have been positive. Here's a brief overview of the big stuff: 

  • When I ordered my wedding invitations from Paperless Post about three years ago, they sent me the entirely wrong envelopes (after I had paid extra for a specific type). I had to email them three times, and include photos, for them to resend the envelopes. 
  • A year ago, American Eagle forgot to include three items I ordered and I discovered that their policy for such a mistake is to refund the customer the money, redo the order, charge the customer again, and then send out the items -- a process that can take anywhere between 24 and 72 hours, plus delivery time. Which might mean (as it did in my case) that the items they did not send to me and charged me twice for were sold out.
  • About six months ago, Victoria's Secret sold me underwear with human feces in them. (Writing that sentence still sends chills through me and makes me feel like I need to dry heave.) The response of every customer service representative I spoke to was shocking in that... they were not shocked. At all. They ended up sending me a $50 gift card, but only about two months and one very well-publicized blog post about it. 

The one thing I've learned working in marketing is that customer service is a huge part of it. Lots of businesses hate websites like Yelp, TripAdvisor, Influenster, etc. because it gives consumers a chance to complain, tell stories, and vent. There are lots of articles making fun of the "critics" who write reviews on Yelp -- wondering why they don't have better things to do, why they need to ruin a businesses reputation for something so small. While review sites present a complicated issue for both business owners and marketers, to ignore them and disregard them entirely is ludicrous. If someone takes the time to review you on Yelp, it's obviously because they feel strongly about it and if they feel that strongly about it, they aren't just writing on Yelp. They're telling everyone they know. 

Success starts with good customer service. But sometimes, it seems like big companies (like American Eagle and Victoria's Secret) get away with really, really bad customer service. (I should take the opportunity to say that I have spoken with American Eagle's social media team extensively and at the time of my incident with them, they were very apologetic regarding the policy; they felt the policy was ridiculous and sympathized with me. It was a departmental issue, clearly.) 

Perhaps this is why I expected really, really bad customer service from Ulta -- and I genuinely did. When I emailed them, I expected to not receive a reply for several days; I expected to be told, no, I'd need to replace the item in store and that was it; I expected to not hear back from anybody at all, actually. 

I was wrong, surprisingly. 

On Sunday morning, I woke up to two emails from Ulta: one apologizing for purchasing a defective product and saying that, while they couldn't ship me a replacement, they had sent me a gift card; and one containing a $5 gift card. Nice, right? I emailed them a thank you, but also mentioned that a replacement polish was $7.50 -- not $5 -- so I'd have to pay $2.50 to replace a defective product. However, immediately after sending that email, I realized I was being ridiculous -- it was awesome for them to send me a gift card anyway! I picked out some nail polish thinner (for future goopy polishes), a replacement polish, and two lipsticks (why not?) and by the time, I'd checked out -- Ulta had replied again, sending me another $5 gift card! I printed it to save for a future Ulta shopping trip. 

I was surprised at how easy it was for them. It didn't take a hundred emails, a hundred tweets and DMs. It didn't require phone calls, arguments, or accusations. They were wrong; their store did a bad thing; they apologized; they did what they needed to do to make me happy. And guess what? I'm happy. It's so easy for customer service to be good -- and yet, it seems to go bad so often. 

It made me realize that I always brace myself to experience bad customer service; I defend myself against it, take a stance and wait for the bad customer service experience to wash over me. Perhaps that breeds back results, but if nothing else, this one instance has taught me that there is hope: hope for companies to learn to be better, to do what is right, to work with customers. And, if nothing else, it is excellent marketing.

4 Little Things that I Miss About Fashion Blogging

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I started fashion blogging in 2009. 

I was a junior in college and posting (really bad) pictures of my outfits was a natural progression of my blog. I had started following some of my still-favorite bloggers. That summer, I discovered two of my absolute favorite bloggers of all time -- Charlotte and Sian. Both of these ladies made me really love fashion blogging; the sense of camaraderie and community made it incredibly appealing. Beyond that, I was at a time in my life where I needed a lot of reassurance and emotional boosting and fashion blogging fit that spot perfectly.

I kept posting outfits through my senior year of college. 2010-2011 were really the best years of my fashion blog. I felt incredibly good blogging about my outfits and it gave me a lot of self-confidence. I've really comes to terms with what happened to my fashion blog: my life changed and my blog needed to change, but I wanted what I had back. Fashion blogging stopped being what I needed to be happy, but without it, I really struggled without my confidence. I did have the constant reassurance I used to have and without it, I didn't know how to feel good about myself. That's bad. You shouldn't depend on a blog to make you feel good about yourself. Something had to give. 

I've been incredibly happy and positive since changing the direction of my blog -- and part of that meant leaving that entire world behind. I used to have an incredibly hard time imaging myself leaving my blog behind. After I did it though, I felt incredibly free; I felt like I could move away from the way I used to look and focus on loving myself in the body and life I have now. Both of my blogs are still available to anyone who wants to read them: Locked Out and Ellipsis

However, there are times when I really, really miss fashion blogging. Here's why. 

1. The sense of community.

Like I said, the sense of community in fashion blogging was something that made me really love it. Sometimes, I really miss the easy ability to find lots and lots of girls writing about the same thing as me! However, so much time has passed in the blogging community; in the past few years, blogging has become really monetized and no one really seems to fashion blog just for the fun of it anymore. Everything is about how to get more followers, how to get money, how to get sponsorships. I miss the fashion community between 2010 and 2012 -- it is something I still, still miss. 

2. The focus on photography. 

loved taking my outfit photos! It was a chance for me to improve my photography skills, learn what worked and didn't work, and show off a cute outfit in the process. I really miss working on my photography and I miss having a diary of my daily outfits. 

3. Easy content. 

Honestly, what's easier than photographing an outfit and posting it? It was so easy! There are definitely weeks where I struggle with what to post, what to include what to write about. If I was still fashion blogging, there would be no question. Post an outfit -- boom! Easy! Done! 

4. The ego boost. 

Like I said, I got a lot of confidence from fashion blogging. I really miss that confidence boost sometimes! On bad days, an outfit post would give me what I needed to remember that I was talented, pretty, and worthy. Now, I have to find that within myself -- and while that is emotionally healthier, sometimes I just want the easy way! 

Remus, the Dog Who Thinks Trash is Food

Well-behaved dogs rarely make history. 

Or at least, I think that's the quote. Either way, it applies to Remus, my 2-year-old Chocolate Lab who is half-terror and half-hilarious. 

When we brought Remus home two years ago, the weekend after Thanksgiving, he immediately helped himself to a razor in the bathroom. I found him on his little bed, with bleeding gums and a guilty face. He hadn't swallowed a blade, but he got time in the kennel anyway. 

Since then, this everything Remus has eaten, to my knowledge: 

  • So much toilet paper
  • Cotton balls, all of them, even the ones soaked in acetone 
  • Paper
  • Coffee grounds
  • An entire banana peel, except for the stem
  • Styrofoam
  • The metal piece off a manilla envelope
  • Several toys, including one of hard plastic
  • A tampon
  • A panty liner wrapper
  • At least five dryer sheets
  • All of the lint that I remove from our dryer

Garbage cans are irresistible to Remus in the way a big plate of donuts are irresistible to most humans. They are his appetizer, his snack cupboard, his everything. Even when I am right there, he will stick his head into the trash can and sniff around. 

Things came to a head over the weekend. On Saturday morning, I noticed a disturbance in the master bathroom. Mainly, the trashcan was considerably... emptier since the night before. As I was doing laundry a few minutes later, I noticed that the trashcan in the laundry room was also... really empty. Hadn't I emptied the lint container at least twice in the last week? 

Remus...

We think he ate about 15 cottonballs, multiple q-tips, and several pieces of floss, as well as a fair amount of lint. I was mainly concerned about the floss -- I mean, it can't be good for the digestive tract, right? The lint is also concerning, as it is heavy and fibrous and decided not a food item. 

I fed him a cup of brown rice and a cup of canned pumpkin after consulting the internet. Nothing in his behavior suggested he didn't feel good -- in fact, I think he felt quite pleased with himself. Mom and Dad were paying lots of attention to him and he didn't even get in trouble, really! How could I punish him? I hadn't seen him do it, but I knew he'd done it. 

The thing about Remus is: right now, he's my baby. Since I can't have a real human baby yet, I have a big, brown, monster of a dog instead. And he is a monster. As sweet and cute and lovable as he is, he is also an absolute monster sometimes. He is unruly, rarely listens to me, and can be downright snotty when you don't pay attention to him. He hogs the bed (yes, all 85lbs of him sleeps on our bed, it's like sharing the bed with an annoying 11-year-old) and his breath really stinks.

He has his moments, of course: he sits to be fed and he stopped jumping on me so much (he still does, however, when he's exciting or thinks he'll get a treat), he doesn't have accidents anymore and he's also stopped throwing up to get my attention. No matter what though, he's my baby and I worry about him almost constantly. 

A few weeks ago, Danny and I came home to the carbon monoxide alarm going off. Our system is one that talks (it's so annoying) and when we got home from work, we heard the beep but not the voice. I thought a battery was dying. We walked inside and Remus didn't make a sound. When I could finally hear the automated voice, I realized it was saying carbon monoxide. I immediately started crying and raced upstairs. Remus is never quiet when we get home and it was so strange for him to be. I was sure he was dead of carbon monoxide poisoning! But no, there he was, sitting in his kennel, being quiet like a good boy for once in his life

I worry about leaving him all day. I worry about the food we feed him and the treats he gets (I recently switched from his favorite chewies to a smaller, more expensive brand because the originals were made in South America). I worry about his paws and his claws and his anxiety over having his paws touched. I worry about what would happen if he ran away. I worry about his back and his hips. I worry about the bald patches on his weird elbows and on his chest. I worry that he's dehydrated, too hot, too cold. I worry about the texture of his paws. I worry about everything

Which is why it is so, so annoying when he eats the trash. 

"Remus," I say, "Can't you tell that you shouldn't eat the trash? Doesn't it smell poisonous to you? Don't you know how hard I work to keep you safe?" I hold his big head in my hands while he lie on the couch. He wags his tail and tried to lick my hand awkwardly. His big, golden eyes are full of love and admiration. (Not to brag, but I am his favorite in the house. Sorry, Danny.) I imagine his reply: But it tastes so good, mom! He does not understand my hysterical worrying. He also does not understand anything I say to him. He probably knows that his name is Remus (or at least sounds like something with an S on the end), but he doesn't know who I am. That's the problem with dogs. They are naked and clueless 100% of the time, but to us, they're family members. 

My dog is an ill-behaved mess and he loves to eat trash. So I spent a weekend watching him to his business in the backyard and, like the dutiful parent that I am, sorting through it. (Just kidding: it was Danny who did the actual sorting.) We identified clumps of tissue, floss, whole q-tips and cottonballs. All the culprits of my worry. Nothing lodged. 

As a punishment to Remus and potentially myself, I bought all new trashcans -- $50 worth of trashcans, to be precise. Remus has sulked around the house ever since, ruefully chewing on blankets and pillows and bits of wood from the fireplace. 

But at least he can't eat the trash now. 

Wow, "The Hobbit" Went Bad Fast

(Note: There will be spoilers in this blog post, so if you haven't seen the movie or read the book and are intent on not having it spoiled, well, sorry.)

I love the Lord of the Rings trilogy; I own DVD copies of all three movies, plus the extended edition blu-rays. I love LOTR and have for a long time. I expected to love the Hobbit movies (despite my pretty "meh" feelings about the book). 

The Hobbit as a book takes me about 2 hours to read. It's a short book. Breezy. Fast-paced. Not too serious. There's some heartache there, but no serious subplots. 

The first film of the Hobbit (the Unexpected Journey) was good; I liked it. It combined the things I loved about the LOTR movies -- the Shire, travel, light adventure, minimal battle scenes -- and created additional characters for me to love. I fell for Thorin, I believed in him; I liked Bilbo, despite knowing what happens to him; I even liked the nameless dwarves and the inexplicably handsome Fili & Kili (let's just admit that Kili is the weirdest looking dwarf in terms of what we know about dwarves, he has to be half-human, right?). 

The second film (The Desolation of Smaug) is where things got a little weird for me. I liked it, just to be clear. It's a good movie! It's fun! Smaug is hilarious (all I can think of when I see Smaug is Benedict Cumberbatch crawling around on the floor with motion-capture balls stuck to his face). It's a good movie! It does a good job expanding the story, creating an interesting match between the elf Tauriel and the potentially half-something-else Kili. I love Lee Pace as Thandruil -- easily the most fabulous elf in all the land. I've watched Desolation of Smaug multiple times on my own without being forced, so obviously, I enjoy this movie. 

Danny and I broke down and finally went to see the last film (the Battle of the Five Armies). I knew it was going to be battle-heavy going in, but... it was still a lot of battle scenes. Like, a lot of them. (Note: Here's where spoilers start.)

I was not prepared for the movie to move so slowly. It was like molasses dripping out of a bottle! And yet, there were still moments, despite how slowly everything was moving, where I found myself asking -- wait, what happened? How did they escape!? How did the townfolk of Laketown get out of the rubble of the town? It went from night-time to suddenly they were dragging themselves onto shore. Did they all swim? How did so many boats escape from underneath Smaug's body? Later on, towards the end, how did they beat back the orcs? Did the eagles help? The eagles seemed to go straight for the armies on the ground -- not the orcs attacking the city. 

It happens in the book, I know, but I wasn't truly prepared for Thorin's almost immediate shift to insanity. (Danny and I laughed after the movie because we wanted dragon sickness to turn Thorin into a little dragon -- with short stumpy legs, a beard, and an amazing fur coat.) He went a full 180 from his previous personality in the space of about 24 hours in movie-time. How was that possible? 

Both Danny and I thought it was hilarious that Smaug was killed within 5 minutes of the movie starting. Really? Really? Also, one big arrow takes down a huge dragon in about 10 seconds. Really? Did it hit his heart? A lung? No? After Smaug died so quickly, I knew I was in for a movie that was going to dwell on some weird aspects.

How many scenes of Thorin's craziness did we need? How many scenes of Thorin being told "you're nuts" did we need? How many scenes of Gandalf telling people another army was coming did we need? Let me tell you: one. You need one such scene, maybe two if they are different. Instead, we had the same ideas explained over and over again: Thandruil doesn't listen to anybody; Legolas loves Tauriel, Tauriel loves the inexplicably pretty dwarf; nobody will listen to Gandalf; Bard is so noble; Thorin is crazy; Bilbo is sneaky. Thanks! I think we got those bits! 

Also, I hated the addition of the Alfred character in Laketown/elsewhere. Just kill him already!! We get it, he loves gold and is a wimp; we've had it slammed into our heads in literally every other scene, completely unnecessarily. Just kill him! I don't care! No one cares! This added minutes to a movie that didn't need any minutes tacked on to it. 

Thorin is the absolute worst. Again, having read the book, I knew his fate. However, the first two movies set him up to fall so hard. He is established as a honorable leader in the first two movies, maintaining a level-headedness and stability. And yet, in the third movie, just to reiterate, he is immediately insane. There is little indication of this in the second film. He goes from covering Smaug in gold and kicking him out to... nuts immediately afterwards. Ok. Completely against his established character, but ok

There was also an easily 5 minute scene where various things characters had said to Thorin in the last 20 minutes repeated over and over as he stood on a gold floor. It was such a long scene that I leaned over to Danny and whispered that this was the longest, most boring scene I'd ever sat through ever. And I saw Eyes Wide Shut in the theater when I was a kid! Guess what? The scene ended with him realizing he was being a total nutjob. Congrats, Thorin! You have an ounce of self-awareness. I don't know why a movie's worth of dialogue had to be repeated at us for it, but oh well. 

The battle scenes were like the rest of the movie: drawn out and repetitive. Did I need to see Thorin's cousin smash in the heads of five orcs in a row? No, one would have shown he was a competent fighter and used a hammer in battle. Did I need to see every character beheading orcs, killing over and over and over again? No. No, I did not. I get it, it's a battle. Let's move on, please. I rarely ever get bored seeing a movie in a theater (I paid at least $8 to be there, I will fight the boredom), but during the drawn out last half of the movie (all battle, I swear), I found my mind wandering. 

All in all, the thing I would say about this movie was it felt gratuitous and sloppy. Three LOTR movies made sense because there are three books (three long books, I should say). Three Hobbit movies might make sense, but the Hobbit is a very short book that is easily read by 6th graders. By the end of the movie, I felt like I'd been had; LOTR was a labor of love and clearly, the Hobbit movies are an act of greed, pure and simple. Someone wanted my nerd dollars and unfortunately, they got them. 

I Set a Goal to Read 100 Books in 2015 & I Have No Idea Why

A book a week is hard, but sane. Two books a week is self-sabotage, obviously. 

A book a week is hard, but sane. Two books a week is self-sabotage, obviously. 

I've made a lot of mistakes in my life. When I was younger, I used to worry about how the small choices I made throughout the day could impact my life later; as a child, this meant I would sometimes wonder if a choice I made, like between ice cream or a cookie for a snack, could impact me later on. Like if I chose the ice cream, I'd be okay; but if I chose the cookie, it would start a sequence of events that could hurt me. I don't know why I thought this way, but I did and it's an idea that's followed me forever. I've occasionally attributed big mistakes or big accidents to little decisions I made that really had nothing to do with anything at all, probably because of my childhood theory. 

What I'm trying to say is: I've made a lot of mistakes and sometimes, I blame them on weird things. 

Take, for example, my typing in "100" in the little box on Goodreads for my 2015 reading goal. I felt really ill on Friday; my legs hurt, my throat started to hurt, I was uncomfortable and cranky and feverish. I didn't feel good, so I ate a lot of chocolate and ice cream. Clearly, this junk food binge lead me down a path towards a moment of temporary insanity because as I was selecting books I wanted to read on Goodreads, it really did seem like a good idea to pledge myself to reading 100 books in the coming year. 

Ha! I'm a fool. 100 books? Madness. 

Saturday morning, having woken up with an even worse sore throat and a fever, I set myself to quietly drinking coffee and making a list of 100 books to read in 2015. The fever had obviously lengthened my brief moment of insanity. However, as I wrote out a list of 100 books, it started to dawn on me that... 100 is a lot. It's 2 and 1/4 pages typed in a list. It's 100 books, Michelle, what were you thinking??? 

The deed is done though and once I announce something (and by hitting "save" on Goodreads, I announced it plenty), I don't back down. It's about honor now. Principle. Dignity. 

So I started to fool myself into it, as I continued writing my list of books: "100 books isn't that many, really. I mean, two a week! You can read two books a week! You've read way more than two books a week before." This is true; I can easily read two books a week if I already own those books. But buying two books a week and reading them and having time for, um, everything else??? That's a lot to ask of myself. 

It's been done though. I have a list of 100 books. In 2015, I'm going to read 100 books. To follow my progress (or, um, lack thereof), you can add me on Goodreads

My New Year's Resolutions

I do best with accountability & patterns. 

I do best with accountability & patterns. 

I have never once kept a New Year's Resolution. But then again, I've never really made them. Every year, I half-hearted set goals that I then toss aside when real life kicks in; in that lofty space between Christmas and January, life feels as full of possibilities as I feel of cookies. I indulge and I want to change, but then once the time-travel feel of the last week of December wears off, I forget about that and go back to what I always do. 

Not this year. I say that with conviction and, despite my doubts, I intend for 2015 to be the year where I toss out my bad habits and replace them with at least decent ones. Here are my resolutions:

  • Complete the Beach Body Guide by Kayla Itsines. You can check Kayla out here or on Instagram. I've been hearing about Kayla for a few months, but didn't put a lot of stock in her guide. However, after following her on Instagram and seeing some of the insane before & after photos (posted by real people on real Instagram accounts!!), I have to admit I wanted it for myself. My goal, instead of having a goal to work out or lose weight or whatever, is to finish the first 12 weeks of Kayla's BBG.
     
  • Eat healthier, smaller meals. I have an unfortunate habit of not eating throughout the day (when you sit in front of a computer for 8 hours straight, it's difficult to actually feel hungry) and then going crazy in the evenings. I eat healthier than I used to, but my portion sizes are still a little messed up. I want to focus on eating more protein, less empty carbs, and drinking more water! 
     
  • Start, and finish, a project. I have half-finished scrapbooks all over the place. Half-started stories everywhere. Blog ideas scribbled down on post-it notes and hastily shoved into a drawer under my desk. It's time to finish a project, self, at least one. C'mon. 
     
  • Read at least one book a week. And not just fiction! As I read the Romanov Sisters, I am reminded of how much I love history books. I read a lot and I want to continue that trend this year. 
     
  • Make date nights a thing. Danny and I both have very short attention spans. Sometimes, we will dedicate a Friday night to watching a movie -- but I'll often end up reading during it or just going upstairs to write. I want to dedicate at least one day a week to doing an activity with Danny -- whether that is cooking dinner, baking something, going to a movie, or working out.