Goals for 2020 (lol)

**Note — In light of this current pandemic and extended period of physical isolation (and, well, being furloughed from work), I decided to push out some of my previously-unfinished and not-bothering-to-finish drafts in my WordPress. Most of this doesn’t make sense and makes perfect sense at once given the climate, but… meh, one less draft on my dashboard. The initial draft of this post was saved on December 14, 2019. I added the “lol” to the title of this post in its current review.**

I’m not buying into that “IT’S THE END OF THE DECADE DO SOMETHING WITH YOUR LIFE!” world-ending bullshit. But I am considering the ways in which my habits make an impact on the world.

I’m looking at you, Amazon.

Yes, this has a LOT to do with my purchasing habits. It may sound like a lot of RULES but I have been really conscious of late (particularly with downsizing to our new house) about the number of items that I own in regard to the amount of space that I have.

Starting fresh for 2020, I do not plan to purchase a book from Amazon unless ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY (see: school or professional book requirements). My Des Moines Library card is ready for duty. While I am disappointed at the lack of small bookstores in the Des Moines area (search IndieBound for yours!), there is the cutest Beaverdale Books nearby and a Half-Priced Books in Clive. One caveat, I really do adore my Book of the Month membership [affiliate link!] and its recommendations, so I will probably keep that going. Any other “new” books that I receive will be direct from the publisher and the like because of ARCs or contest giveaways.

Search etsy before making Amazon purchases (or AllModern, or Wayfair). This, for when I’m in my online buy-binge modes (it happens, I am a human with faults). I know that etsy is not without its problems, but I will actively seek out small store owners/makers for what I want in home decor. Tbh though I am Not a Fan of in-store shopping much. In concert with that decision, I will seek out home decorating items with the fun local vintage shops in town (like CKD Vintage or Funky Finds) before buying online (window shopping online for ideas is fine, obvs).

One of the difficult decisions for me is my wardrobe. I’ve tried selling new/used clothing on Poshmark and it just sits there in my laundry room waiting for sale. I have had close to zero success there. Dropping off my no-longer-worn items at Goodwill is super convenient, but I was really horrified to learn that only a small percentage of their donated items go to the sales floor. THE REST GOES TO THE LANDFILL. I can do better. For one, to not purchase what I don’t need (learning the difference between “want” and “need” is super hard and I effectively interchanged and edited those instances even in this post). For two, return what I haven’t worn. And finally, find organizations that will actually use/need the items to be donated. A strategy for shopping that has worked to help me curb my impulse behaviors is to put items in my cart… and then close the page. Or save to Pinterest to contemplate the purchase further.

Farm Report: 2.14.20

Happy New Year (I think I’ve only had ONE post so far in 2020?!) and welcome to the 2020 Farm Report that coincidentally intersects with 2020 Valentine’s Day.

succotash
Groundhog Phil deemed the spring to cometh. And while the Iowa fields got a little shook up and shivered this week with a -30 wind chill, I believe we are ready to defrost. Hellllllo 40-degree temperatures! In all seriousness though, it’s time to start shopping for your tomato seeds. Here’s a handy search to find your estimated frost cycle for your own zip code.

bleeding heart(land)
I ordered a very special heart cake for my husband for Valentine’s Day from Sugar Freak Show and… just OMG it was not only incredibly detailed and quite a feat of sugar engineering, but was a super fun experience. The cake itself was delicious, natch. Also, I can eat “styrofoam” fondant for days and days.

Bleeding heart sugar freak show cake Des Moines
Even the plastic, label, and styrofoam tray were edible!

midwest shenanigans
How about that caucus? Maybe at one point I will write about my full experience. In brief, it was actually a really exciting thing to be a part of (my first Iowa caucus!). I hope that it’s a tradition that remains despite all the WTF that occurred as a result.

The Decade, Pt. II*

I have been blogging within several decades. Blogging is dead blah blah blah…

Before “blogging” blogging, there was a site called CollegeClub (RIP) where I moderated an LGBT interest group – maybe this was more community management than actual blogging but we didn’t have a word for that yet and its online format was the precept for what would shape my identity in writing online. I would eventually build a personal site on Geocities, writing about my life. Then Blogger became a thing and enter Mel-o-Dramatics, which apparently still exists within Blogger’s cyberworld (and is apparently wiped aside from one redirect post?). There was a short-lived Dink Blog that I started with my boyfriend-now-husband after we moved in together. 30-something Therapy, when I was having an age identity crisis… which became Ultra Fun: 30-something Miles during my next identity search. And my legacy: Life, Liberty & Pursuit of Your Boyfriend. The blog that I adored and subsequently blew up (and allowed the URL ownership to lapse) after ten+ years of unabashedly putting myself out there. I turned that online presence into a small web copywriting and blogging business which served me well… until it didn’t.

Recently, I had a group chat within a Patreon community that I’m a part of – moderated by the ever-awesome Nicole Antoinette (you should be listening to her podcast!). She asked an interesting question about where/who we were a decade ago, anticipating the new year/decade. Timehop also likes to remind me of all my prior misgivings from Pre-husband/boyfriend/AB. But that pre-AB era was 2008. In 2009 though, I was blogging and my identity was firmly implanted as a blogger. I was blogging before blogging was cool and now I’m blogging because blogging is no longer cool. I am both an early adopter and a late bloomer while also being a contrarian.

It’s 2019 – and while not as often as I would like… because imposter syndrome – I am still blogging. Look, I cannot peak at age 28. And this site will very likely morph into something different this year. I also might start blogging about my thesis research project on my professional site (which is woefully under-used).

*Part I is lost to the Great Zip Drive Death of 2001

Extra Credit:
You killed the (old) Internet! {via Buzzfeed}
What happened to CollegeClub.com? (via Erich Stauffer}

The books I loved (and hated) in 2019

The Reading Challenge goal that I set for this year was 40 books. Why 40? Why the fuck not.

Dreadfully, as the year-end was closing in, I picked two of my least favorite books of the year. Alas, I have a lot of fun reads queued up for 2020 (and I might even finish another book before the end of the year). I am “done” with grad school books right now, so I’m aiming for another 52 books goal in 2020, as I did for my 2015 Reading Challenge.

Fun stat, courtesy of Goodreads
Average book length 311 pages

Exciting new finds: I am newly in love with historical fiction – despite my disliking Taylor Reid Jenkins’ Daisy Jones & The Six which made me oh.so.sad considering how much I adored The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. That said, The Last Collection: A Novel of Elsa Schiaparelli and Coco Chanel was my fave of the year. I have The Glittering Hour waiting for me on my nightstand and I can’t wait to get into in 2020.

Best of the best: I continue to love the habit of thrillers as my bedtime read. But the BEST books I read this year were not thrillers.

My Top 3 Favorite Books of 2019:
#1 American Dirt
#2 A Good Neighborhood
#3 Rosie-Colored Glasses

All of these Favorites moved me emotionally to tears. American Dirt was so, so good. I wanted to savor that book for the entirety of the year. A Good Neighborhood – just as worthy of a read (and the tears). Somewhere within the first half of Rosie-Colored Glasses, I started getting a sense of what was happening in the main story arc… and I read the rest of the book with a lump in my throat. It positively broke my heart. I cried multiple times reading it – and was tearful for the rest of the day.

Best Non-Fiction:
It’s such a weird thing to have to separate, but here we go. Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World, Educated, and Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup were wholly engrossing books that warrant added mentions. I described Range to a friend as having justified my entire existence. (If you read it, and you know me, you would understand.) The world was obsessed with the Elizabeth Holmes/Theranos scandal and woo-boy did this 339-page text spill allllll the tea. Educated is a must-read for that person who takes their education (and access to it) for granted. Probably, you. (Definitely me).

Biggest Disappointments:

  • Aforementioned Daisy Jones & The Six – at one point, after starting the book, I had to put it down… and came back to it a week later. Overall, the format was really distracting and the story disconnected. The author didn’t bring interest to any character. It was… boring. Although it did get better as I settled into the format (I ended giving it 3 stars), I was ultimately disappointed.
  • Three Women – what in the actual fuck with this book?! This is NOT a story about women’s desires. FULL STOP. This is a grossly over “reported” book about sexual trauma and shitty men (and their unfortunate women victims). It is not “deep.” It is depressing as fuck.
  • Yes, Please – so I waited too long to read this and I guess I wasn’t missing much. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
  • Calypso – I love David Sedaris, and this book was just not as memorable as his others. There were funny and really heartwarming moments of storytelling included, but it was not his best. Yes, comparison is the thief of joy and I expect a lot from him, my one true favorite writer.

Worst of the worst:
Oh god, Present Over Perfect was some of the most god(emphasis on god)-awful pandering bullshit that I have ever laid my eyes on (at least since I read that You Are a Badass horseshit last year). Bonus award to a book-that-shall-not-be-named because I was already called out once in public by the author when I publicly rated it online as terrible to which I succumbed to embarrassing pressure and anxiety and subsequently removed all ratings so as to not evoke further drama. Yes, seriously.

Caucus Season is Crazy

Caucus craziness has descended upon Des Moines. It’s three months until The Caucus, and today is the Democratic celebration of Liberty & Justice (formerly, and no longer named after a slave owner and that other guy who was horrible about Native Americans), which brings in (almost) all the candidates and their associated entourage… and, apparently, celebrities.

Weezer is doing an outdoor (!) concert at noon, by way of a rally for Andrew Yang. YANGAPALOOZA.

I received an alert that Ben Harper will be joining PETE. Pete and PETE were walking down the street…

I have an event this evening – that is NOT the democratic dinner, sadly – and am disappointed at being unable to hang out downtown to see who else shows. However, this will be the first of many, I’m sure, opportunities for a “Pete Up” at one of my favorite local watering holes or Selfies with Warren.

And thus begins my Caucus Season is Crazy check-in and column.

Also, I’m going to attempt to blog every day in November per NaNoBloMo again this year. See you tomorrow. Yeah, no… this isn’t happening this month. 😆

Farm Report: 10.19.19

Since moving into the city, I don’t really see the fields as much anymore (not that this category will go anywhere). But SINCE WE STILL OWN THE OTHER HOUSE, I need to make irregular trips back to check on packages and dust content. And we still live in Iowa – and by any outsider’s guess, that means we all live on farms. Be that as it may, I have a strong response to seeing yet another plot get listed by developers, another with a request for zoning changes (OMG how many more commercial strip plazas do we need in Waukee??), and my heart breaks for the change of scenery on my bike rides.

And I’m not even from here.

Suffice to say, corn season is affirmatively over. Morning temperatures are already in the 30s. THE 30s. Don’t get me wrong, I am a fan of fall and winter but oh my lord did the seasons change abruptly.

hot corn salsa

I went to Mean Girls at Des Moines Performing Arts Center this weekend and there is a bit where someone is dressed as a sexy corn (you know the Halloween party scene), and admittedly (disappointingly? lol), I want that costume. 😂

OK, OK. So I volunteer at races quite a bit and I honestly think it would get quite a laugh from runners. 🌽

Speaking of costumed races, sign up for next weekend’s To Grandmother’s House We Go trail race!

midwest shenanigans

Did you hear that The Flag of Des Moines has officially been re-adopted? I’ve been a huge fan of this movement (and a new owner of their new cool branded hat). Fly your flag, Des Moinesians!

What is home?

The concept of home is something I’ve struggled with since I first left Cleveland in 2004-ish. It was a brief “pack everything I own and drive across the country” relocation that found me returning to Ohio approximately 8 weeks later. Tail between the legs, financially broke, romantically heartbroken, et al., ad nauseam, shit you go through in your 20s when you try to run away from your problems both figuratively and literally.

I moved away “for good” over 9 years ago – first, living in Pittsburgh for 6 years, and now the Des Moines area for over 3 1/2 years. I’ve had varying degrees of emotional attachment to Cleveland since relocating. When we lived in Pennsylvania, it was an easy road trip several times a year. I struggled with feeling disconnected, particularly after my grandparents passed away. There was no longer an open drop-in location. Going back to Ohio meant the trappings of stress, anxiety, not recognizing anyone anymore when we went out… guilt. I was determined to make this Pittsburgh-is-my-home identity my replacement.

I mean, it mostly worked… except for falling back in love with the Browns and clinging hardily to that fandom amongst a sea of everything black-and-gold. WHO EXPECTED THAT?!

Now, living in Iowa, we’re required to take at least two flights to get back to Ohio. The trips are fewer – at least once per year, but sometimes twice. The travel stress is different, and after setting boundaries and a rotating holiday schedule a few years ago, the feelings of guilt have dissipated. I’ve started to cry at the airport the last two times I’ve left, including this most recent trip over the weekend. It was such a wonderful homecoming for a cousin’s wedding that included none of the tug-of-war for visitation. We all had to be at the same place at the same time, and most of us (ahem) were on time.

“Where are you from?” people ask when I say I’m not from Iowa. It usually starts with, “Well, I moved here from Pittsburgh…” or “Originally from Cleveland, but I was in Pittsburgh for six years before here.” The definition of home is kinda fuzzy, but I find myself more using Ohio as my answer. I can still shit on its insistence that it is the midwest (because I’m from there and it is NOT). Sure, I get sad when I leave, mostly because of honest-to-goodness happy memories that were made. But I can also honestly say that I don’t miss it, especially when I return to Des Moines and I am bursting of love of this place we’ve made our new home.

It’s a complicated relationship.

Farm Report: 8.23.19

I missed the Adel Corn Festival AGAIN because I was out on a weekender in Dubuque – my 3rd trip to the city since moving to Iowa. And I find more fun and interesting things to do there with each visit. Plus, it reminds me of Pittsburgh in a lot of ways, so it’s a big whiff of nostalgia for me. OMG THEY HAVE INCLINE?!

Dubuque incline
Just as terrifying as the incline in Pittsburgh.

the corn dog truth

Speaking of Pittsburgh, Hitchhiker Brewing made a collaboration beer: Hitchhiker x Walter’s Southern Kitchen team up for “Hard Corn”

Iowa brewer Court Avenue Restaurant + Brewing Company had a CORN DOG beer that coincided with the Iowa State Fair (of course!)… which was, sadly, sold out by the time I got my corn husks to the fair.

midwest shenanigans

I FINALLY WENT TO THE FAIR! The Iowa State Fair did NOT disappoint, and I can’t wait to go back next year. Obviously, it was impossible to see and eat everything in one day – so I look forward to more multi-day annual adventures.

Iowa State Fair - Heartland Transplant

In other Iowan news, we bought a house! Well… we bought another house! We found one for sale in a Des Moines neighborhood that we love – that is just outside of downtown, and I am positively thrilled. We closed this week and move in the first week of September. I am no longer a suburbanite and officially a Des Moinesian. Des Moiner? And OMG I can walk to Harbinger. 🤤

Two truths and the lie you keep telling yourself.

As a teenager, a peer told me that I would never be a cheerleader. Because of my un-popularity, the team (and ADULT coach, wtf) saw to it that I never made the junior high squad despite my background in gymnastics and dance and that I was MORE THAN CAPABLE to be one. It took me a few stupid years in that school, but once we tried out for the high school teams (which were three merged junior highs) I was one of ONLY TWO that made it on from my school. I was quite proud of that middle finger I invisibly showed off when everyone who made the previous three years perfectly terrible then wanted to be my friend. Because rejection, especially as a kid, can manifest in many different ways (and I was already receiving quite a bit of that in other places, too). I proceeded to excel in cheer even in my new high school after I moved/transferred (which came with it a whole NEW SCHOOL of mean girls), and went on to cheer in junior college which was one of the most fun memories of my life.

I was good enough. I knew it. And I showed up. Again and again.

But that is never the end of the story, is it?

As a young adult, starting out on my hopeful career of working in TV sports production, an older male colleague at one of my PA gigs warned me that I would never find a job. Whether this was his own personal narrative and negative disposition of opportunities within the industry or your everyday generalized misogyny (because look, all I saw were men around me), I believed him.

So I gave up my dream.

Or did I?

Why is my fire alarm going off? (No, seriously, why.)

In the background of these stories, however, is that when I transferred high schools during my sophomore year, the transition was difficult. Though, yes, I made the cheerleading team, I was also the only senior cheerleader not to make homecoming court. I was also a runner. A runner who LOVED cross country and track (100 and 300 hurdles!) and at my new school I was overwhelmed with finding out that the athlete in my event made state her freshman year. Instead of training with her as a way to get better, I saw it as “I’ll never be that good” and never even tried out for the team. This feeling was a running highlight for me for most of my remaining teenage years and far too long into adulthood.

Funny thing, I fell in love with running again another two decades later.

I returned to college 20 years after leaving high school for graduate school with a focus specifically IN THE FIELD OF SPORTS. I guess I never let my dream of working in sports die. It just looks a little different than it did from my dreams two decades ago. To be honest though, I was fairly directionless for most of those 20 years – frequently bored, unchallenged, dropped in and out of several different colleges (finally finishing my undergrad at age 36).

As a kid, I wanted deeply to become a writer. I wrote short stories all throughout elementary school, transitioning to poetry and journalism in high school (I even started a horror book based on a crazy dream I had in my teens). As an early adopter of blogging in the early 2000s, I feel as though that part of my identity has lived on. I tried to “monetize” those dreams into a web copywriting career upon losing job-after-job in the tanking recession of working in the real estate boom-and-bust. I had a few bylines in magazines, and it worked well for a while… but that’s the funny thing about turning a passion into a full-time job. Because I still love research and writing – and now have the specialized knowledge in a particular field, I consider if things might be different if I try that again.

But then there is the other part of my childhood where I learned how to program on computers (my first, a Commodore 64). I was in my elementary school’s computer club learning command prompts (on early Apple) and going to science fairs trying to figure out how to build the “behind the scenes” stuff of computer games. I remember also learning dBASE in high school and learning HTML early to build websites (in computer lounges at school that remained locked and very-nearly inaccessible). Despite not having a lot of luxuries growing up, I always had access to computers. Going to dad’s meant playing around on the Commodore; mom eventually bought us a Tandy. I received a desktop computer for high school graduation in 1995. I have never not owned a computer of my own since.

My life has often been distracted by many paths of interest, which might be why it seems that I have never really been a “career person.” There really is no hardline beginning and end to this story, aside from maybe being OK with not having a 5-year or a 10-year or a lifetime career goal wrapped in a single identity. Maybe it’s OK to have multiple careers in one lifetime. Because: do we really ever know what we want or who we are? And how those things might change from experience and age? How can you weave passions and interests from childhood and beyond into where you are today? Also, when was the last time you gave yourself permission to change and explore something new – or revisit a former part of your identity that you never fully realized?

Extra Reading:
Manage your energy, manage your life (or something) {via Pocket} Because WOO BOY, I am exhausted by career paths. I feel like energy management is the IV I regularly need to tap.

Farm Report: 7.4.19

Hello. It’s me. Is the first post back after a hiatus always the hardest? It’s not you, it’s me blah blah blah. It was never my intention to fizzle out for 3+ months, but I’m now in the internship phase of my graduate school adventures and I needed to finish out my coursework with a bang. I also went to California two weekends ago to celebrate with my cohorts in commencement. Ooooooh. Ahhhhhhh.

My grad school adventures could probably command an entire post – and I’m really working this year on holding two truths at once – but it was both an eye-opening, life-changing experience and also kind of a disappointment. Too soon? Too deep? Here, have a bomb pop.

bomb pop popsicle july 4 independence day cold sweets
TAKE THE POPSICLE.

Yinz, the internet just showed me bomb pop-flavored vape juice and my disappointment was put rightly in its place.

knee high

The weird weather this year has caused a shortage of sweet corn this Independence Day – but if you hold your shorts (yes, it is FINALLY shorts weather!) the sweet, sweet corn prize is only a couple weeks away.

midwest independence day shenanigans

I live in a municipality that doesn’t allow personal fireworks AND YET I am forced awake until after 11pm because people are inconsiderate and they suck. Iowa Nice (except when I need to celebrate America with fireworks)*

Don’t suck, here is a list of PROFESSIONAL and LEGAL displays in the Des Moines metro.

*Don’t steal my tagline, Raygun.