This is why I resist being an adult as much as possible.

I live alone. Sometimes it’s sucky. Like when I’m making dinner. For one. Again. There’s a scene in Must Love Dogs when Diane Lane (love her!) starts yelling at the butcher that she mostly eats over the sink and doesn’t need recipes. That’s me. Except it’s usually the little peninsula counter thing I have because the sink is in the corner and it’s dark over there. And I like recipes because I like to cook. But sometimes living alone is great. Like when I can hog the bathroom and the hot water in the morning. Or if I forget a towel when I shower or forget to grab the clean underwear from the dryer before said shower, I can dash around the apartment au natural (this could probably happen if you lived with your significant other. Or a roommate you’re creepily close too.) Me? not so much with the naked in front of the roommates. I think they appreciated that about me. And then there are the habits that are learned when living alone. Like running around the apartment without clothes on. Or taking a shower without the door closed. Or leaving the window mostly open in the middle of winter and making it freeeezing upstairs but toasty downstairs. Or leaving laundry everywhere. Or not washing dishes. For days. I like to hide the fact that I’m such a slob. Those close to me know it’s a lie, but they let me be in denial when I’ve frantically cleaned before their arrival and then casually comment “it’s usually cleaner than this, but I ran out of time”. To the rest of the world I can hide my shame when it comes to dirty dishes (and, um, the eternal pile of dirty laundry in the living room [it’s near the bathroom and the stairs to the basement, why would I ever bring it all the way upstairs just to bring it back down]). It’s just. I’m the only one who sees it. And as long as there is enough clean underwear and enough pans to cook vegetables and meat into some sort of dinner. And as long as there are enough plates to eat over the peninsula. And as long as there are enough clean forks to eat pie. Dirty dish/laundry piles don’t really bother me. Unless it’s summer because then there are bugs. And my apartment is old and has a wet cool cellar with C-E-N-T-I-P-E-D-E-S. This is one reason I really wish I had a big strong roommate, male or female. I can deal with most bugs. But those nasty brown-thousand-leg-move-at-the-speed-of-light things freak me the eff out. Seriously. In terms of creep factor they are on par with the s word. (the s word is the animal that Padma wants on a mother-effing plate). So in the summer I keep things a little cleaner in a futile attempt to keep nasty things away. Usually this fake I’m-always-this-clean routine works. Until I need an oil delivery. And because I’m a new customer the oil dude has to come out to “inspect” the oil tank. And he tells me I have a leak. And I call my dad, who is friends with the landlord (which is how I landed in my apartment) and my dad and the landlord talk back and forth and my dad calls and asks questions like “How was he able to inspect the tank, it’s behind a wall.” And I have to explain the dude told me he has to look at the bottom of the tank and there’s a hole in the wall so that the bottom of the tank can be seen. And then he asks “well is it a puddle, because they spilled some oil when they put the new boiler in” and I explain “I don’t know. The dude just said it’s leaking and he maybe had his hand on the pipes”. And then he asks “which pipes? The big ones coming from the tank?” and I’m think the eff I know. I don’t have a plumber’s license and though I’m independent in most ways I’m the idiot that’s been checking the tank gauge (win for me for not being a total idiot) since July even though only the heat uses oil and I didn’t turn on the heat until October 28th but what I said was “I don’t know. The small pipes near the bottom?” hoping that by making it a question, rather than a statement, he could maybe fill in the blanks and get me to say whatever it is he wanted me to say so he would understand what his crazy offspring was saying. Instead he repeated “small pipes near the bottom” slowly in a way that let me know he was writing it down and he was trying to write it down verbatim. But wait. He knows all there is to know about stuff like this. This is why I called him. If he’s writing something down its foreign to him. And now I’m the girl who doesn’t know what pipes are in her basement (that’s what she said. ha!) But really. I can tip toe into the basement in the pitch black to reset the fuse. And I can change the light bulb in the head lights of my car. And once I even replaced a whole tail light. And I can hunt down that damn beeping smoke detector and get a new battery in that bad boy. And I can deal with a clogged drain. And I built a pot and pan rack from wood and nails and stuff, and screwed it into the wall. But if you ask me to point to the water heater or boiler or other big metal tank-shaped thing in my basement I’d eenie-meenie-miney-mo it and try to look as cute as possible when I guessed. Anyways, my dad took his notes, talked to the land lord and then called me back. And this whole post is to get to this. The landlord is stopping by this afternoon sometime. He lives next door to me so it’s nice and convenient for him to stop by when he can. And when he lets himself in I’ll still be at work or the gym. AND HE’S GOING TO SEE MY DIRTY DISH PILES. Think this will change my behaviors? No way, man. But at least I have the decency to have shaaaame for an hour. Until pinterest lures me in with it’s pretty pictures. Then those dishes will be far away resting on the back burner of my mind. And on the back burner of the stove.

Liz, step awaaaay from the cookies.

Mmm. Christmas cookies. So goooood. But soooo bad for me. Boo.

I’ve put them in the freezer as a method to deter me from eating all the cookies in all the land. I’m not sure it’s going to work. I’m just wanting chocolate. In chip form, wrapped in dough, in dough form swirled with cream cheese, in chocolate form as a piece of chocolate. Just gimme. But I must say no. Lame.

One win tonight. I just wanted to get home, get on the phone, and order pad thai. Instead I got home, did some dishes, and made myself Thai Basil Chicken with brown rice. Only two pots and it was pretty tasty. It was a little spicier than I love, but wasn’t so overwhelming I didn’t like it. The recipe had jalapenos in it. I’m really not a spicy food liking person, but I don’t mind a little flame in my thai food. Knowing how potent these babies can be I cut them and immediately washed the knife and cutting board to make sure no juice or anything transferred to other ingredients. And I was successful. I ate dinner happily and went on my merry way. Fast forward two hours and I’m rubbing my eye. OW OW OW SEARING PAIN!!! Oof, it was bad. Apparently I didn’t actually wash my hands while I was washing the cutting board and knife. Um duh. I would think that would be my first instinct. Survival of the fittest #fail. Must remember to wash the hands better next time. With bleach. Or maybe set them on fire.

11/11/11, Veterans Day, WPI Founders Day, and ZZ Bid Day.

1. Happy Veterans Day! If you’re reading this and you’re a veteran or the family member of Veteran, thank you. A local reporter here in Boston said it best, I think “davidwade: Everything I get to do today is because someone, more courageous than I’ll ever be, put their life on the line. To all veterans: Thank You”
2. Those two late nights in the last week turned out to be very much worth it. The ladies of my chapter are welcoming nearly 40 New Members into the Sorority tonight. I want to yell it from the roof tops. These women have had a rough couple of years and to see them do so well swells me up with pride. It’s weird because for the first time I feel only pride in a job well down by someone else. It’s almost maternal pride because I’ve been working with many of these women for the last three years and have watched them grow and now they’ve just had this ultimate success. I know most people can’t agree on Greek life and think only about hazing, and drunk kids, and buying our friends, and all the other terrible things. But the students in the Greek system at WPI last year performed 12,600 hours of community service. With only about 800 members. While maintaining high academic standards, participating in other campus organizations and sports teams, and maybe a few parties here and there. I will admit I joined for a more active social life. But I stayed because I learned leadership, confidence, study skills, networking skills, and how to actually dress appropriately for my age. Ok. That’s my rant. I’m just so proud of these girls. And I wish everyone in the world could understand why.
3.The whole, “my rear hurt less from the bike” last night was a fake out on the part of my body. I got up this morning fine. And then I got to work and y’all, my tailbone hurt so bad I couldn’t sit like I normally do in my chair. And when it’s your tailbone and gluteus maximus/medius/minimus (did you know you have three gluteus muscles??) you can’t rub those muscles in the office. So I’ve been twisting in my chair all morning to try to stretch out my rear. And all the other muscles that tightened up while I was hunched over that bike.
4.Running tonight. I think I helped my sinuses along with a Neti-Pot rinse last night. If you have sinus problems, check that baby out. It’s so gross but oh my I didn’t know how badly I was stuffed up until I used it. And all it took was one time to start to feel the effect!
5.I’m trying to limit myself to only one diet coke a day. I work in a scientific field and can usually separate fact from fiction when “studies” come out. So many results turn out to be some reporters interpretation of someone else’s interpretation based on one patient in the study who had something unexpected come up. But too many studies have come out with similar information that it leads to a larger waist line. Today I had two diet cokes before lunch. And one with lunch. I had a little water in there too. I didn’t sleep well last night and I’m doing a lot of reading and I need to stay awake. I’ll switch to water this afternoon.

Ellipticals, recipes, and broken 15 year old things, oh my!

I’m on Weight Watchers online. And I blog there. I’m trying to do 30 days in a row. So I’m going to be lazy  resourceful and post them here too. At least the interesting ones. Here are 5 things I learned in the last 24 hours. (Basically since Day 1)

1. The elliptical is a necessary evil. At least for now. As I train for this 5k and really become an actual runner, I’m going a little easy on the “cross train” days. That said. I hate the elliptical. Especially when I forget my head phones and the sort of creepy guy in a hat is grunting next to me. “Dude, just don’t go so fast and I won’t be worried you’re going to have a heart attack.”
2. Dinner last night was a fabulous fAHbulous swordfish recipe. Basically you cook pasta (though I opted for wheat berries. Love those things!). On the side you heat oil in a pan. You cut swordfish into 1/2 inch cubes … you know what. I’m just going to link it…I think. Awesome Swordfish (also, subscribe to their mailing list, even if you live elevendy million miles from the North End of Boston. Their recipes are killer. And the emails are hilarious)

Good Food Made Simple Oatmeal
picture from shopwell.com

3. I eat breakfast at work because there must be at least 60 minutes between my bed and breakfast at all times. I am in no way, never have been, never will be a morning person. I’m praying my future (unknown) husband will get up with the kids. I can’t guarantee the right kid will get into the right car pool car otherwise. Anyhoo. I like oatmeal. It’s easy at my desk. And it keeps me full until lunch, which is key! I’ve been reading that steel cut oats are better. Nutritionally and fillingly (it’s a word. Promise). But it takes 30-40 minutes to cook. Until now! Good Food Made Simple has steel cut oats oatmeal. (Or is it steel cut oatmeal?) They cook it and flash freeze it into pucks that you can just microwave. It was delicious. The drawback is the cost. I posted this on fb because I live my life online and because I like to share things. And it works! Because my cousin sent me lesson 4.

That zero means it won’t play a CD. Sad.
4. You can pre-make steel cut oatmeal (it sounds better saying it that way, even if it’s not correct). Recipe here (Disclaimer. I haven’t tried this yet. I make no promises. I’m trying it this weekend. I’ll report back).

5. The last thing that  I learned today is that my boombox that I’ve had forever and ever died. (seriously. The thing is 15 years old. I’m only 25. I’ve owned it for 60% of my life.) I’m sad. I think I’m going to try to find a repair place. Or maybe my step dad can work his magic. I can’t get rid of it.


That’s it. If you made it this far, you’re as crazy as I am.

Hearts and non-broken boomboxes

-Liz


New running shoes. I’m in Love

Someone has to tell me. Is it weird that I’m this in love with my new running shoes?

About 18 months ago I met my first pair of Brooks shoes. I had Asics and they made my feet hurt. So I went to a shoe store and the guy actually listened to what I had to say (I told him I was training to become a runner so I would be walking and running and let’s be honest, it would be more walking than running but I was dreaming big!) and he dug through the back room and came up with a pair of shoes that made forever brand loyal to Brooks.

Recently I started C25k for a second time to get ready for a Thanksgiving Day 5k. Monday I noticed my feet were starting to hurt. My shoes didn’t look that terrible, but maybe I needed new shoes. I went to an actual shoe store again and they actually watched me walk barefoot (it’s less creepy than it sounds) and then put another Brooks shoe on my foot (it was then that I realized my shoes really were a heaping pile of mess). I loved them! But I tend to love the first thing I try and buy it. I’m never really unhappy, but I should at least try other options, right? I tried three other pairs. The other two Brooks were ok, but not awesome. And the Saucony were just weird and not for me. So I bought the first pair. And I can’t stop thinking about them. The insoles are bright yellow, they have a flame orange arrow on the side, they are clean and new, and they have that new shoe smell. And they are called Defyance. As if to say, I’m overweight and not the fittest I could be, but I’m going to PR at the Thanksgiving 5k, no problem.

I went to the gym today and usually when I buy new shoes and walk into a gym for the first time I think “Man I must look like a tool. Here’s the fat girl walking in with her water and brand new shoes and is going to “work out”. Today I walked into the gym ecstatic to try running in my sweet new kicks and that everyone should admire how awesome and pretty they are. Because today it was “Here’s that thinner girl who’s be running at the gym three times a week (sometimes 1) for almost a year and check out her new shoes.” And that confidence? That my friends, is how a shoe can make you feel like a million bucks.

It’s weird to love these shoes this much, right? Even if it is, I don’t care. They are fabulous.

Hearts and that new sneaker smell
-Liz

Captcha my brain

Is it possible that I was born without the part of my brain that can process a captcha phrase? I know I’m human. And yet the computer continues to doubt me. I see the little scramble of letters and think “well, I’m not a computer set up to automatically post cat-lady-crazy-should-be-sitting-in-the-corner-eating-paste-spammy comments, and I can certainly prove it”. Then I type in the little phrase and it says “wrong, fool. You are not human. You haven’t proven it to me.” And then I’m all “internet I hate you and your silly security measures and if I didn’t want to post my hi-LAR-ious comment that will totally make me and this blooger best friends forever, I would walk away. Instead we’re gonna fight it out until you believe I’m human.” and the internet just says “bring it.”

And then one time. At band camp… I mean. uh. haha. Awkward.

But really, one time I was trying to buy Jimmy Buffet tickets for my mom and I and her friend and her friend’s son (who is my age. [Yes I know. We’re in our 20s went with our mothers. But we like our mothers. And inherited our love for Jimmy Buffet from our mothers. And when we bought the jell-o shots from the dude and dudette wandering the parking lot, our mothers did not. So it’s not like we were tied at the hip all night])…I digress. Anyways I was trying to buy the tickets and the captcha phrase spit back at me 5 times! 5! Do you know how fast a Jimmy Buffet concert sells out. Fast. Like faster than a bucket of fried chicken during game night at a Fraternity fast. When I finally proved I was flesh and blood and got through we were stuck in the 150 millionth row (ok, so 135th?). Still. We woke up early and logged in at 10:00:00.00 am (it was Saturday. That’s early. I don’t have kids. Don’t hate) to make sure we got tickets. And that stupid scramble of letters said “No way. not lettin’ you past my messed up text that doesn’t spell anything that blends so well into the background the q looks like a 4.”

I quit captcha. There should be an attachment for my laptop with a little needle that would prick my finger and draw a sample. That’s right internet security demons. Find a computer that can fake Grade A blood to pretend it’s human (literally. My blood is type A. Which makes me a fairly useless blood donor. Though I still donate.) But yes, that’s right. I’d rather give my computer blood than “type the characters in the box below”. Sadly, I think if you want to comment here, you have to type a captcha phrase. If I figure out how to submit a blood sample instead, I’ll let you know.

Hearts and Needle Pricks!

An open letter to my muscles

Yo. Muscles.

How are you? Actually I shouldn’t ask that. I know how you are. You are in pain. But whose fault is that? Ok. Maybe it’s mine. A but. But let’s have a little chat. You see. Doing the same activities over and over is not good. One, I get bored. And then Mr. Motivation leaves and I’ll never be able to build you up. Two, it doesn’t help you get stronger because you get good at doing those moves. And then you get bored and lazy and the moves are not as effective. So you and I? Well, we mix things up. And I know when I start a brand new routine or introduce something a little radical you need some adjustment time. And that adjustment time usually involves some soreness. But really muscles. Two new exercises last night and you’re all hurty? These exercises are just slight modifications to moves we’ve already made. In fact, one of them was just me being able to do more of them in a row. And yet. And yet? You insist on bringing the pain. It’s not unbearable, just a twinge mostly. But its muscles that let me walk and work at my desk. So it’s just a little ouchy. Every time I move. Yes ouchy. Don’t argue with me muscles. It’s a word. Because it the perfect description of what you’re doing to me right now. And you know what, muscles? I don’t appreciate it. So can you just back off? Let’s just relax and enjoy the rest of today and let the elliptical not totally stink tonight. And get ready to run tomorrow morning. You know it’s coming. Be warned.

Heart’s and heating pads,
Liz

My wallet stayed at the grocery store. After I left.

I hate purses. Well, really, I hate carrying them. I have very very round shoulders. Nothing stays on them. Not bathing suits. Or bras. Or purse straps. Plus when you sit you have to put it on the floor or try to balance it on the back of a chair. So I carry a wallet. I bought this wallet at the Mart of Wal. For $5. Because it could hold my iPhone along with money and credit cards. But a wallet is easier to leave behind. In a grocery store parking lot. On the seat of a cart. Which is what I did, 4 hours ago. And didn’t realize until 45 minutes ago. As I was leaving my cart at the rack in the parking lot I noticed a carriage guy going to retrieve them. Apparently he’s a good egg and turned it in. I called and they have it and I can pick it up tomorrow morning. Lesson learned: (other than paying more attention to my stuff and not leaving my wallet/debit card everywhere) always put the cart back into the little corral. I can only imagine if I had left it randomly in the parking lot and someone other than a 16 year old making minimum wage who is still afraid of his parents had found the wallet.

Blog 2.0

I’m just coming back from a week long vacation. And I just moved into a new place. And I feel like updating a blog again. Though I do have butwhowilleattheliver.blogspot.com with the Best Friend, that’s a joint endeavor around a specific task.

This vacation I just came back from was a week at a cottage at Lake Winnipesaukee with various members of my family on and off all week. It was always unknown who would be going or coming. We used to stay for a week up there all the time when I was little, but we hadn’t stayed at a cottage since I got my driver’s license a million years ago. It was different going on vacation as an adult. First, I did a lot of the planning this time. Picking the type of place, the town, which cottage, what meals we would have, who would bring what, plus packing more than just some clothes because someone had to remember trash bags and bug spray and packing my own shampoo and sunblock instead of just using family stuff. None of this was a lot of work, and I got input from the rest of the family. It was just a new experience. Second, it was fabulous to be away from work for a week, but it was a lot harder to let go of my job than it was when I was only thinking of school or was leaving behind a part time job. I did manage to keep myself away from email and the internet all week and only watched the Sox games for tv. But somewhere around Thursday evening all of the stresses that I had managed to let go of for 4 days started creeping back in. And third, I couldn’t believe how happy I was to be coming home. I had a great time, but a night in my own bed after a shower that wasn’t lake area well water was fabulous.
There were some similarities between vacationing as a kid and an adult. I swam everyday and spent as much time underwater as above it, the s’mores, family, getting whomped by my Mom in Backgammon, laughing over Uno, hearing gravel under the car tires, fishing (RIP the two fish I sort of killed when I had to retrieve the hooks they swallowed), the Tamarack, Hart’s Turkey Farm, and coming home with a sweet suntan (the dermatologist is going to be pissed [this is more adult vacation than kid vacation and the tan is mostly from the swimming, I swear])
When I got home last night I had 200! emails. I sorted through them quickly enough and then took a deep breath and logged into my work email. And the news I found there has created a very relaxing weekend so that vacation isn’t totally undone. I’m thankful for the vacation though, becaase I think this work week is going to blow. I see a large cocktail in my future.

My Lunch Hour: Also known as that 30 minute window when my diet coke habit almost got me arrested.

It’s been a while. But life’s been boring. Not today!

Building management sent an email. October is fire drill month. All I think is “Oh great, it’ll probably be a rainy day and we’ll be stuck outside for 40 minutes because of some malfunction” forgetting that fire drills mean firefighters. And forgetting that the firefighters in Bedford are hot. My bread was moldy last night (a rapid change in topic, but it swings back. Promise). I packed the turkey and cheese and decided I would run to Stop and Shop at lunch and pick up some bread. I walked out of the office and as I did, the firefighters were coming downstairs. So difficult not to stare. I got in my car and while driving by them saw that they looked to be in the ready-to-monitor-fire-drill-evacuation stance. Then I realized I was going to miss the fire drill. Oh well. Then I realized that I would miss the opportunity to maybe sneak a couple pictures for some firefighter obsessed friends while we were all milling around outside. I think about going back. But the firemen just saw me leave. And then won’t care that I came back so quick. But someone in my office might ask. I need a plan. Oh! Forgot my debit card. (Totally plausible because I do that all the time!). As I’m driving back into the parking lot I see the fire trucks are leaving. And the lights are on. Apparently a fire outranks them walking around while the women of office buildings stare (This is ridiculously shallow. But they are that good looking.) I turned around again, and headed to the store. I found a parking spot. I walked in. I only needed bread and advil, so I grabbed a paper bag and a self scanner thingy (sorry to get so technical on you). Then I see a display. Four 12 packs of diet coke for $11. The debate started in my head. We need more in the apartment. You can get it cheaper at Wal Mart But that’s a box that doesn’t fit in the fridge This is supposed to be a quick trip for bread It’s on sale! Ok fine. I went over to get a cart. And the scanner thingy started screaming!! And flashing! And typing angry messages at me. It wants to be returned to a rack. I don’t know what that means. Clearly this is for the idiot that forgets to put it back after paying (not me yet, but I feel it coming someday) so it must go on a rack by the cash registers. But it didn’t stop. Luckily customer service is right there and they told me, very nicely, “oh, it goes back to the main rack”. Their facial expressions were even sympathetic! Because now I had to recross the 50 feet (really 15) back to the rack. And the thing is beeping and I’m trying to find a speaker to cover and mumbling under my breath for it to be quiet. Because people are going to look around for the noise and see me mumbling to a hunk of plastic and metal. I plug it in and the beeping stops. Now I have to rescan my card and get another scanner thingy but it’s ok. Because I’ve got cheap diet coke. I grab the diet coke, the bread, the advil, and some Halloween candy to take to a meeting later (my theme this week is sugar up the Alpha Gam undergrads and then leave). The self check lanes are all full of lunchtime people getting things like salads etc. But the regular lines are empty. I pull in and go to scan the bar code that says “I’m Done” and the cashier lady asks me “so what was wrong with the scanner earlier” This woman is literally 60 feet from the door (no exaggeration this time) and she noticed and remembered that 10 minutes ago I was the crazy girls mumbling to the scanner thingy. Humiliation number two!

Maybe diet coke didn’t almost get me arrested. But I am feeling a little traumatized.

The diet coke is worth it.