Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Day 1 #julybookwormchallenge


via Instagram http://ift.tt/1M8WsoS

July TBR. This does not include the books for #tbrtakedownreadathon2 or the book for the girls in capes book club. 

July Reading Challenge!


via Instagram http://ift.tt/1Hty0I9

Soooo I'm late with starting this, but I'm super excited anyway.  A couple might be problematic, but we'll see!!!

Instagram Read-A-Thon for July!


via Instagram http://ift.tt/1O9qaZ2

1: a book on your shelf that you have been putting off for ages.
2: a book you bought but never read..
3: A guilty pleasure book (such as a child's book you have always wanted to read OR RE-READ!)
4: a graphic novel on your tbr list'!
5: a book recommended to you by a friend that you just never picked up!
6: any book on your tbr that is NOT YA.


Shouldn't be too hard, right?  I read like crazy.  This is from July 16th to 21st.  Five days, six books?  Meh, no biggie.  Right?  Right?!

Here's what I'm planning on reading:


  1. The Princess Bride
  2. Interview with a Vampire
  3. One of the Mercy Thompson series
  4. Ms. Marvel Vol 1: No Normal
  5. Ancillary Justics
  6. American Gods

Somehow this feels ambitious.  Way ambitious.  But hey, fortune favors the bold.  

Friday, May 1, 2015

Organization Terrors

I have a touch of obsessive compulsive disorder.  It doesn't manifest itself in constant hand-washing or a flicking lights on and off a certain number of times, but in my ability (or inability, really) to organize.  In my ideal world I would have an infinite number of shelves/drawers/places to put things so that I could have as many categories as I feel I need.  

The best way to describe it is a scene in Wall-E where he has just found a spork and is trying to place it on his shelves.  It doesn't fit with the spoons, nor does it fit with the forks, so he creates a new category just for sporks.  Luckily, he has the space to create that new category.  

My brain likes categorizing things into minutia.  Unfortunately, doing that level of organization is impossible without everything turning back into chaos, and the chaos is so overwhelming that I feel trapped by it and cannot organize.  If I cannot have the organization that my brain wants, then I don't know how to handle it, and suddenly piles (upon piles upon piles) are the only way to go.

But eventually the piles begin to meld together back into the chaos from whence they were formed, and I'm back at square one.    

After speaking to someone who knows more about how to handle issues like this, I'm going to start organizing, slowly.  Very slowly.  Starting with big categories.  Categories like: Books, Clothes, Jewelry.  Once everything is in its own container, I'll slowly start going through each container.  It's going to be difficult.  I accept that.    I also will NOT do things in large chunks. I'll dedicate 15-20 min at a time to go through the containers. This way I am limiting the amount of stress I'll be going through - taking nibbles instead of bites.  

I have a Pinterest board dedicated to organization.  I'm hopeful that sometime in the near future  I will be able to utilize many of these ideas to make my world a more organized place - a place that is closer to what I see in my head.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Monthly Goals



So, it has become painfully obvious that weekly goals don't work.  I cannot plan for my body.  I can; however, make plans for the month.  That way, I can adjust when I do them based upon when I feel up to doing them.  So here goes!

1) Take control of the garden!  I have no idea what is planted around the rented house, but I plan on finding out!  Let's do this!  Wooooo!  I hope to have pictures to document the process.

2) Clean out the closet.  My closet is in desperate need of re-organizing, cleansing, and just general de-funkifying.  Something in there REEKS and must be PURGED!

3) Make something each week.  This can be sewing or food or anything.

4) Post on the blog at least once a week.

And that's it.  Taking it easy, but still trying to get everything back together.  It's especially hard with R in Chile for some time this month.  It's making me realize how much he does for me.  I definitely didn't realize until now how helpless I am, and how he keeps me from knowing that.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Autism Village

Autism is a scary word.  It brings to mind children who are completely detached from the world, incapable of communication, tending frequently to loud, occasionally violent outbursts.  You see parents with stressed, worried eyes who try to insulate their child from the dangers of the outside world.  The fear of autism is so strong that some people are choosing not to vaccinate their children.  They would prefer them to be exposed to measles, among other diseases, rather than possibly have them be autistic.  (I should note here that the study people are fond of quoting about how vaccinations cause autism has been proven to have been falsified.)  

Some of this perception is true, and some of it isn't.  What is important to understand is that autism is a spectrum.  Each person on the spectrum has their unique quirks - the saying is that when you meet a person with autism, you have met ONE person with autism.  Their form of autism is unique; the things they react to are unique; the intensity of their reaction is unique; the form of their reaction is unique.  

Now, I am not in any way an authority or expert on autism.  I likely have things wrong.  I am not a parent of an autistic child nor do I have autism myself.  All of my information is second-hand.  I know parents of autistic children.  I know people who are on the spectrum.  I have read blog posts/articles written by parents of autistic children.  So, I repeat, I am not in any way an authority or expert on autism.  

What I understand is that, frequently, raising a child with autism is a balancing act.  You want to have your child experience the world, but you also want to protect your child from negative experiences.  Which, now that I think about it, is the want of all parents.  Unfortunately, this is more difficult for parents of autistic children.  

Let's say you want to have a family dinner out at a restaurant.  For most families, the most difficult part is deciding which pizza location they like best and making sure everyone has shoes and a coat on.   Families with an autistic child have to consider much more than that.  Is my child having a good day?  How close together are the tables; will someone bump into my touch-sensitive child?  How loud is it there?  Will they be accommodating to my child's food requirements (like having each part of the meal on a separate plate or having only square food or any one of a number of things)?  How will the staff deal with my child having a melt down?  What sort of seats do they have?  And a million other things I cannot even begin to fathom.  

The answers to these questions aren't in restaurant reviews.  They are in the parents' minds who have already been to that restaurant.  Families with autistic children rely on word of mouth to find places.  But what if there were a better way to communicate?  

That's where Autism Village steps in.  

Autism Village is striving to create ways to advertise autism-friendly businesses.  They are currently running a kickstarter  to create an iOS app sort of like Yelp or Trip Advisor for autism friendly businesses.  It's for autism families, by autism families.  They recently hit their goal, but still have quite a bit of time left.  Stretch goals include expanding the app to Android and tablets.  Beyond that?  They want to create a certification program for businesses looking to become more autism friendly.  

These people are going to make the world a better place.

How can you help?  Donate $1.  Really, just $1.  They have a friend of the project who will donate at least $10,000 if there are more than 10,000 backers.  So the number of backers is just as important (if not more so) than the average donation per backer.  

Do you know anyone on the spectrum?