Feb 26 2010

Have a Cup of Tea

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I just finished a three day marathon at work and am totally ready to slide into bed. Tomorrow I hope to feel much better after a cup of tea in the morning. For now, good night and happy travels (imaginary or otherwise).

Tea Cozy by knitstorm.com


Feb 24 2010

Is the Olympics Causing You to Miss Out?

You would think that Alaskans would care about the Winter Olympics given that we have ample weather for practicing these sports. In fact, most of us couldn’t care less. I am easily addicted to the Olympics though. I love the personal stories and pomp and circumstance. I spent the Beijing Olympics huddled near my TV for two precious weeks of summer watching people go back and forth in a pool. Man what a waste. I missed out on actually doing something for two weeks because I was watching the Olympics. This year, no more!

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I have been invited twice to curling watch parties where die-hard fans huddled around a screen with a Canadian cable channel playing as you apparently  can’t trust American networks to provide equal coverage to non-US (and probably better) teams. I didn’t go, as strangely tempting as it was.

Instead what have we Alaskans been doing over the last two weeks?

Carving Ice in the World Ice Art Championships, or in my case, going to look at the finished results.

With our long winters we have to keep busy indoors to so we have an active arts community. Last weekend we had a world famous cellist Zuill Bailey in town for one of our Symphony productions. This weekend we’re off to see The Tempest at the Fairbanks Shakespeare Theatre. I myself am back in piano lessons and loving the use of my right-brain again.

Alaska isn’t exactly on the triathlon or Iron Man circuits so instead we’ve invented our own alternatives. Arctic Man and Iron Dog respectively. Iron Dog is the world’s longest snow machine race and Arctic Man is one of the World’s Toughest Downhill Ski races, and an exciting snowmobile race, all in one. The skier begins at a summit elevation of 5,800 feet and drops 1,700 feet in less than two mile to the bottom of a narrow canyon where he meets up with his snowmobiling partner to finish the race. Attending the starts and finishes of both races is a communal craziness. (13,000 fellow adrenaline junkies make Summit Lake the 3rd largest city in Alaska for a weekend every year.)

If you think that is crazy and wonder whether the winter has frozen our brains, there are even crazier Alaskans who participate in the traditional “Chatanika Days Outhouse Race”. Each March five-person teams race a one-mile course, with four pushing and one riding in the specially built “racing outhouses”.

For those who prefer more sane or scenic pursuits there are also the traditional winter sports: snow shoeing, skiing, snowboarding, cross-country skiing, going to the hot springs and Aurora watching.

So what could you be doing this winter weekend instead of vegging out to the Olympic commentary?


Feb 23 2010

Lazy Minimalist Moneymaking

This post: “Selling Back Really Old Textbooks Online” is a good description of a way to make money selling old books online for money. I’m all about that right now, given that every spare penny goes in the travel fund and that I am very anti-clutter at the moment. But this method is way too labor intensive for me. I’ve been to the post office dozens of times because of “ship by” dates when selling things on Amazon and eBay and its no fun, not to mention a waste of gas.

A slightly less profitable, but far less labor intensive method would be to setup an Amazon seller account. Ship Amazon all your books and let them ship them to each buyer and deposit the profits into your account directly. Ship once and forget. You set the price you’re willing to accept. This also lets people get Super Saver Shipping on your items. Sure you’re stuck with Amazon and might not get highest price, but you’re also not stuck running to the post office.

Add $409 over the last 2 months to the travel fund.


Feb 12 2010

Have a Cup of Tea

teacup-print-threesugarsI love the way cubed sugar tastes. I suck on it, roll it around on my tongue. Its like wedding mints, a very occasional treat. My packet of Splenda isn’t cutting it this morning.

Via: Mary Ruffletinywhitedaisiessimple-pretty, { anna fraser }, via {frolic!}


Feb 11 2010

Will You Be My Travel Valentine?

Does your Valentine love to travel? Or, do you need an excuse to treat yourself? Here are some treats I love in price order.

Chocolate Walk – We tried to take the famous Paris Chocolate Walk, but our stupid Italian train conductor decided to take a 3 hr coffee break and we missed it. If you happen to be taking the ultimate romantic trip to Paris this Valentines you could sign up for the real thing or invent your own.

Take your sweetie on an adventure of your own, sampling chocolates from the local shops and seeing a little more of your home-town. In Fairbanks, Alaska we have a tiny little downtown, but even that has a smattering of coffee shops and a little chocolate shop called the Fudge Pot.

shampoo-lush godiva

Lush Travel Shampoo – I wish I had enough of this to use all year round, it makes my hair smell wonderful and takes the place of both shampoo and conditioner liquids when I travel. (Amazon or Lush $9)

cardigan-anthropologie-puckerupThis jersey cardigan is just weighty enough to feel like its wrapping me up cozily on a flight. I have one in black which I love as an airplane cover-up, night-time wrap, and scrunchable cardigan which never wrinkles. (Anthropologie $98)

flip

Wanting to capture memories together screams: “I Love You.” Loud and Clear. I used to think that having my phone be my camera, video camera, music player PDA, etc. etc. etc. was great until I realized that once its battery goes dead I can’t do anything. Now I’m looking for small gadgets that do things well. I’m looking at this Flip HD camera for low-tech, high quality video capture of our upcoming trips together. This one captures 120 minutes of HD goodness at a time and dumps onto any device with a USB port. (Amazon $193.94)


Feb 5 2010

$7.00 Shampoo or Europe?

Ok, saving for Europe spending challenge #2 was to get through our most routine money spending event “grocery shopping” without spending unnecessarily. Results were mixed.

I love tea and usually splurge on loose leaf good stuff, but I did manage to settle for some Bigelow Tea Constant Comment this week. I also made a menu and a list and I stuck to it where food was concerned.

But then I got to the personal products aisle. My favorite shampoo/conditioner, which I can actually feel the difference after I use it was on sale. Ahem, it was $7 instead of $10 for beautiful, organic, makes my hair lay straight and smell like heaven shampoo. I could have bought Dove for $2 per bottle and been fine, but I had been so good with my food purchases and it was 30% off so it snuck its way home with me. Deduct $10 from Europe trip savings.

I find saving money to be like dieting for me, it just doesn’t work if I feel like I am depriving myself. I come up with justifications, cheats, and can turn a bad day into a bad week/month/etc and suddenly I’m having a garage sale and wondering “Where did all this stuff come from?”.

Dieting is something I have given up. I have dieted and lost the same 40 lbs twice in my life. But I have also lost 25 lbs the right way, slowly over the last two years, where it was not a diet, but truly a lifestyle change and I know how good it feels to not be lecturing myself, but to be thinking about things in the context of taking care of my body.

If I approach money with more of the attitude that I now approach food with I may be healthier overall. So I’m going to change all my self lecturing over my shampoo to a quality vs. price decision. It is just worth it to me and I’ll find another creative way to replace the $10 in the Europe fund.


Feb 2 2010

Culture becomes more ingrained as we grow older

I agree with the thought that culture becomes more ingrained as we grow older. This is why I don’t just want to travel, but as some point I want to live somewhere other than Alaska and I want any kids I may have to be shaped by a variety of cultures. I would really like to be a world citizen.

via: Rolf Potts

“We all go through a similar process of being formed by the culture around us. It is something described well in Bruce Wexler’s book Brain and Culture: Neuroscience, Ideology and Social Change, in which Wexler argues that much of human conflict arises from our efforts to reconcile the world as we believe it to exist (our internal structures) with the world we live in. According to Wexler, we develop an inner world, a neuropsychological framework of values, cause and effect, expectations, and a general understanding of how things work. This inner world, which underpins our culture, forms through early adulthood, after which we strive to ensure it exists, or continues to exist, in the world outside. Those inner structures can change in adulthood, but it is more difficult given our decreased brain plasticity. That different internal structures exert different pressures on the mind (and body) should not be surprising. Every culture has its own logic, its own beliefs, its own stresses. Once one buys into its assumptions, one becomes a prisoner to the logic. For some people, that means a march toward its more tragic conclusions.”
–Frank Bures, “A mind dismembered: In search of the magical penis thieves,” Harper’s, June 2008


Feb 1 2010

Wander

saying-wander

holdonlover:

{day-breaking}.