Tagged: reading

February 1st, 2010

10 Tasks (This) Online Teacher Should be Doing But Isn’t

Teaching has a way of infiltrating and taking over every area of my life. After wrapping up my full-time job’s tasks every day, I work on my classes. After dinner every night, I work on my classes. During my formerly sacred Saturday and Sunday afternoons, I work on my classes.

Thankfully, I only have two weeks left at my full-time job, so come February 15, I should be able to better schedule all of my class to-dos alongside my real-life want-to-dos.

In the meantime, here is a top 10 list of things I should be/want to be doing while my classes preoccupy my mind, time, and computer:

  1. Sleeping. I laid in bed an hour-and-a-half last night and outlined my B-block classes in my head. Finally, I turned on the light, grabbed my calendar from the living room, and wrote everything down. Purging my brain of these thoughts is the only thing that lets me get to sleep.
  2. Dishes. Remember last week when I told you how Chris and I are eating at home in 2010 to cut down on the calories and costs associated with eating out? Yeah, that yields a lot of dishes. And I’ve been going an average of four days without doing them because as soon as dinner is over, I’m back at my computer working again.
  3. Blogging. An editorial calendar for one’s blogs is a great idea, but it doesn’t write the blog posts for you. I’ve made revisions for this week, and we’ll see if I can write ahead of schedule and keep you all interested.
  4. Exercising. Yes, it’s winter, and I don’t have a gym membership, but I do have a Wii Fit, and I can’t seem to muster the mental energy to be told, “You’re a little shaky.” I’m looking ahead to the middle of February when spring starts to shows its face every few days, and I’m going to work toward a daily walk/run in my neighborhood.
  5. Sewing. Did you know that Chris was an awesome husband and bought me a sewing machine for Christmas? Did you know that it’s been sitting on my office floor since then patiently waiting for me to christen it? I have a project planned, but I need to buy the material for it, which should happen on Friday morning. Cross your fingers.
  6. Reading. Remember that list of books I said I was going to read in 2010? And the stack of magazine subscriptions I get every month? I’ve made a little progress, but not nearly as much as I would like. (And the next book on my list is maybe 50 pages. Maybe.)
  7. Crocheting. I have a project sitting out in the living room that’s been getting a little attention here and there. It’s a baby blanket for no one in particular, and I’m assembling it. This part is time consuming and not as much fun as whipping out an afghan.
  8. Showering. Because sometimes I lay awake at night for so long that I’m exhausted in the morning and don’t give myself enough time to take a shower. Gross, I know.
  9. Laundry. And I’ve been wearing shirts and jeans over and over without washing them. In my defense, I did wash all of my jeans this weekend; they walked themselves to the laundry room.
  10. Eating (well). Oh, I’ve been eating. Eating crap. And lots of it. I’ve been eating through the giant tin of popcorn we got for Christmas. I’ve been eating the bag of peanut butter M&Ms I bought for Chris. I’ve been eating the chocolate chocolate chip cookies I made for Bible study last week. To my credit, I am eating/drinking a chocolate protein shake (with/without a banana tossed in) every morning for breakfast. And I’ve been packing healthy lunches: oranges, hard-boiled eggs, grapes, canned soup, 100-calorie packs of popcorn, nuts, etc. But come the weekend, and I’m noshing on whatever junk food I can find!

As you can see, I welcome Monday, February 15, and (hopefully) the eight hours a day I can schedule to my own liking.

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March 18th, 2009

3 Things Twitter’s Been Doin’ for Me Lately

You all know that I’ve been a little excited about Twitter lately. This remains true, but I think my excitement has tapered off just enough that I hope I’m no longer annoying. I’ve got multiple accounts set up, and I’m using several tools to help me manage those accounts. Today, though, I want to share what Twitter has been doing for me lately.

1. Twitter Allows Me to Share My Interests with Others

In addition to being excited about Twitter, I also get excited about blogging, but I realize that my personal life and the friends who follow my personal account don’t necessarily share those same interests, which is why I created Blogger’s Guide and Tweeple’s Guide accounts just so I can share the reading material I come across that I deem shareable. And yes, there are two accounts because blogging and twittering don’t necessarily overlap for all people (though I think they should).

2. Twitters Provides New Reading Material

I love my Google Reader as much as the next blogger, and a lot of the material I share on Blogger’s Guide and Tweeple’s Guide come from the blogs and websites I read. At the same time, I still miss a lot of fresh blogging- and Twitter-related material on the web. Every day, I scan through the Twitter feeds for BG and TG, looking for articles that I’ve missed. I read them, and if I think my followers will enjoy them, I retweet them to the appropriate account.

3. Twitter Helps Me Network with Others

My BG and TG accounts are new (since January) and pretty much unknown in Twitter circles. Still, I spend a bit of time every week looking for people who might be interested in following me. Enter Twitter Search. At first, I searched for blogging- and Twitter-related keywords to scope out new people, but the search results were overwhelming. Lately, I’ve tied those same searches to Springfield, Missouri, and found many bloggers and twitterers in my area. Even though these accounts are not geographically specific, I think tying them to a specific place and a specific person (me) builds their credibility.

So that’s what Twitter’s been doing for me lately. What’s it been doing for you?

March 8th, 2009

I’m So Excited! Exploring the Passions that Have Shaped Me

Today’s blog post is a response to Linden’s post Passions: How to be Happy Despite/Because of Them? from Friday, which was a response to Lorraine’s post Passions and How to Put Them to Use. Both posts got me thinking about the things that I’m passionate about and how they present themselves in my life.

Now, I’m hesitant to use the word “passions” in this post because as a Christ-follower, I’m used to this word in context of the Bible. And in the Bible, “passions” is solely used to describe sin related to sex. For this post, I’ll be using the word “excitements” because truly these are the activities, hobbies, and interests that get me excited. Let’s start with the most obvious…

Writing
I don’t remember when I started writing or even when I started loving writing. I bookmark my childhood according to the books I read, and those good books gave me a love for the well-crafted word that I return to even today. I wrote a handful of poems, short stories, and essays as a kid and early teenager but let very few people read them, so it wasn’t until high school—in my junior and senior composition classes with Mrs. Frankenfield—that I shared my talent with others. My favorite projects were a problem/solution essay about the football game parking problem (junior year) and an expository essay about Charlotte Gilman’s short story “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Even when my dual-credit comp class wrote exit essays to send to CMSU, I didn’t think I was a great writer. I was just writing the required essay and received a perfect score, the only perfect score ever given to the loads of students across central Missouri taking that same class. Once in college, my mom (of all people) introduced me to the professional/technical writing program, and I still don’t know why I listened to her and pursued it.

Even so, I still can’t say that I love writing. Writing is not some separate thing like sushi or my cats or running or even Chris that I’ve attached myself and my adoration to. For me, writing is how I express myself. It’s so deeply ingrained in me that it hurts my brain to not put pen to paper. As Gloria Steinem once said, “Writing is the only thing that, when I do it, I don’t feel as if I should be doing something else.”

Reading/Good Books
I firmly believe that my ability to write well came from a love of reading. Again, I don’t remember my first book or when I began to love reading; it’s just something that has always been a part of my life. My best friend Jenny and I became best friends because we both loved books, and even today, all of my closest friends are voracious readers. And when we get together, we inevitably come to books in our conversations. I don’t read books as much right now because my other excitements often get in reading’s way, but good books and reading are always there.

Editing
Like writing, my excitement about editing comes from my love of reading. Having pored over hundreds of books in my adolescence instilled in me what the English language is supposed to look and sound like, and when it looks or sounds wrong, I can’t help but notice. Every day for a semester, I sat on the edge of my seat in my technical editing class, learning new proofreading marks and typographical symbols. That semester, I spent nearly every Friday night sitting at home working on my editing project. Yes, I needed to put that much time in it, but heck, it was the most fun I’ve ever had on a class project. I could still easily see myself working for a publisher or newspaper copy editing books and articles for grammatical problems. And still, one of the best gifts Chris ever gave me is the Chicago Manual of Style, an editor’s bible.

Web 2.0
I honestly don’t know where my excitement for Web 2.0 came from. I don’t come from a hugely tech-savvy background, but I have always been a quick learner. My undergraduate program required one web development class, which required us to create a web site, but mostly we focused on writing for the web and learning Dreamweaver. After that, I worked on a website for my internship and then at LifePoint, but even then, I hardly knew anything about Web 2.0. One thing kept leading to another. I got on Facebook. I started a Blogger blog. I began reading RSS feeds in Google Reader. I learned XHTML and CSS. I wrote my thesis about Web 2.0. I installed Google Analytics. I signed up for Feedburner. I took Javascript and PHP classes. I moved to WordPress. I bought my own domain name. I bought my own hosting. You get the picture. All of this adds up to the crazed online gal I am today.

Running/Heath/Fitness
One more thing I could devote all my time to. And again, not sure where this came from. I wasn’t the most athletic kid growing up. I took lots of dance classes and tried softball, basketball, and volleyball. The only thing that stuck was tennis, and I played on my high school’s tennis team all four years. Somewhere between freshman and senior year, I became an athlete and started running and weight-lifting. I loved weight-lifting and encouraging my partners so much, that I decided I wanted to pursue athletic training and dietetics in college. I had a big dream of being a trainer for an NFL football team, but it turns out, I hate chemistry. Hate, hate, hate it. And you sort of have to know chemistry to go anywhere in dietetics. and at SMSU the athletic training program was more demanding on students than being an athlete was. I switched to tech writing before I even got to college, but I still love learning about health and fitness.

When I started running in grad school with Linden, it quickly became another excitement of mine, something I wrote about more than once on this blog. 5Ks, 10Ks, and a half marathon ensued. I joined the Y and took strength training and spinning classes, and I got the bug to be an athletic trainer again. I haven’t pursued that, but I sometimes wonder what could’ve been if I pursued this field instead of writing…

History
I never considered a career in history even though history was one of my favorite subjects in high school and college. I think this excitement came from my dad, who loves old war movies and who would’ve studied history had he not dropped out of college. It’s funny to think of my dad as a history teacher, but he’s such a good story-teller, he’d have been really good at it. I also love my seventh grade history teacher Mr. Stillwell, who got me excited about Missouri history and Harry S Truman. Pair these influences with a good biography or a novel of historical fiction, and you’ve got a girl who loves studying the past. Right now, my favorite time period is the turn of the 20th century, during the era of the new Biltmore estate and Edith Wharton’s novels. I also love biblical history, the Renassaince, and World War II. I’m so crazy about history and good books (and now art, since I married a designer), that I’ve considered developing a holistic homeschooling curriculum that studies history in the context of its literature, art, inventions, people, etc. so students can really dive into specific time periods. One of those projects that will probably forever be on the back burner of my brain.

Dance
This is a silly little excitement of mine, but I have loved it every since I was a little girl. I think every little girl dreams of being a ballerina, but I was obsessed with it. When we moved into our house when I was seven, we painted the walls ballet pink and carpeted it with pink carpet. Even into high school, I kept parts of my ballet-themed room. I started taking dance classes when I was four or five, dropped dance for acrobats when I was in elementary school, and picked up ballet when I was in fourth or fifth grade. Mind you, I was never a great dancer. I was the worst in the class, and I always felt like the other girls and my teacher were annoyed I was there. I quit dance classes in middle school because it wasn’t fun anymore, but in high school, I took some swing dance classes and danced in show choir. In college, I took a few ballet and jazz classes, and I met Chris, who happened to have ballroom danced in high school and who taught me some of his Latin favorites.

I don’t do a lot of dancing now, but I still get excited about it. You can guarantee that if any dance-related TV show or movie is out, I’ll be watching it. And as selfish as it is, I hope that when Chris and I do have a kiddo, that God will give me a dancer.

Others
Those are the main excitements in my life, but others make their way into my activities from time to time. Crocheting, photography, cooking, crossword puzzles, math, and organizing all make their rounds into my evenings at least a few times a year.

All these big and little excitements have shaped me into who I am today. Weird, isn’t it? To think that when I watched old war movies with my dad or walked into my first dance class or read that first chapter book, that they would have had such an impact on me. Many of these excitements don’t make their way into my life every day, but they’re always there, waiting for me to get excited about them again, if even for a little while. I love it!

June 12th, 2008

Where Is Sarah?

Blogging around here has been a little hit and miss lately, huh? There’s a number of reasons for that. I’m not making excuses, but I thought I might tell you like it is.

First of all, I’m incredibly boring. Maybe you read this blog and think I live a glamorous life, but let me tell you that most of what I do every day is not worth blogging about. Yes, I’m training for a triathlon, but I can only talk so much about that. Yes, I work for a church, but we all know there’s no titillating tidbits I can write about. Yes, I have two crazy cats , but I don’t want to be that girl all the time.

Second, it is summer. No, I’m not in school anymore, but we all know summer changes the rhythm of our lives for a few months. The only show worth watching on TV is So You Think You Can Dance , so I’ve drastically reduced my TV watching and picked up several books. You all know that I’m a huge reader, and this is the first time in a while that I’ve picked up a handful of books that I don’t want to put down. This spring, I did a lot of my blogging while watching the many TV shows I follow, so since I’m down to one, my blogging time has been cut.

That said, I’ll be reducing my blog posts a bit this summer. You’ll still get For-the-Love-of-Links Fridays , Saturday Spam Haiku , and triathlon training updates, and I’ll be reviewing all those books I’m reading. You can expect three or four posts a week from me for the next few months until fall TV comes back on and I’m blogging in the evenings again.

April 24th, 2008

Confessions of an Obsessive Bibliophile & Compulsive Reader

I am a bibliophile. I’m not sure how I contracted the book-hoarding bug, but I’ve had it ever since I bought and read my first “chapter book” in second grade. That’s when I started buying every book I could get my hands on; I pilfered through my dad’s spare change at the end of every week, so I would have enough money for the next book order or book fair.

I am also a compulsive reader. I cannot not read. And I know that I owe many of my “smarts” to all the reading I’ve done over the years. I read absolutely everything (cereal boxes, signs, newspapers, magazines, pamphlets, books) and retain much of what I read, including stuff from those essays on the ACT! What’s that all about?! Often I’ll find myself in a conversation, and some random fact will pop out of my mouth, and I’ll think to myself, “Where did that come from? I know I read it somewhere, but where?” However I got to be this way, I don’t really care. I love that I am a reader!

My fetishes have evolved since elementary school, and here’s a look at them over the years:

Be still my heart!Sarah’s Card Catalog. At some point in school, I learned about the magic of card catalogs, and because my own library of books was growing, I created my own filing system. Every book had a unique number and an index card with its bibliographic information. I encouraged my family and friends to borrow books from Sarah’s Library. (Isn’t amazing that at even such a young age my love for office supplies and need to organize presented themselves?)

Jenny—The Other Bibliophile. In fourth grade, I met my best friend Jenny. She’s a bibliophile, too, and she had her own library, a sign that we are kindred spirits (bonus points if you know what book I’m referencing). We often borrowed books from one another, and we formed a book club at one point. We still recommend books to one another today, and I think she has me beat in the sheer number of books read ever.

First Bookshelves. When my parents built their current house—my childhood home—, they let me choose my bedroom because I was the oldest kid; I could have the bedroom with three windows or I could have the bedroom with two windows and a window seat. The window seat didn’t come until I was in junior high, but it was lovely once it was installed. Flanking both sides of the bench under my window were floor to ceiling shelves and storage, and I filled them with books, which were of course reorganized biannually.

Isn\'t it wonderful?Future Bookshelves. I still dream in bookshelves. I’ve visited the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina a handful of times, and the library in that house makes me yearn for one of my own. It has two levels, rolling ladders, a spiral staircase, and a passageway behind the chimney. And remember the scene in Beauty and the Beast when Beast gives Belle his library? Remember all those books? Oh, be still my heart! And please don’t let me look at a Levenger catalog; the temptation to lust is just too great. One day, Chris and I will be independently wealthy, and we can have a room just for our books. It will be marvelous.

Literature Classes. For my writing degrees, I had to take a few literature classes to round out my studies, and I loved all of them. My first was a survey of American literature before 1965, my second was a study of Toni Morrison and William Faulkner, and my last was a study of Edith Wharton. The Wharton summer class was one of my favorite classes of all time because I read excellent books all summer! If you have not read the House of Mirth, I beg you to do so immediately!

Barnes & Noble. I do not know how I grew up in a town without Barnes & Noble, but from here on out, I will live within BN driving distance. I don’t always have a lot of money to spend on books (thankfully, my family knows that BN gift cards are always gladly accepted), but when Chris and I are on a date or out putzing around, we almost always end up here. There’s just something about browsing all those titles that I love—maybe it’s the possibility that my next favorite book is waiting in one of those aisles.

Harry Potter. I cannot write a post about reading without mentioning Harry Potter. I love those books because they are wonderful, because they got my husband reading, and because I can connect with so many others because of those books. They tormented me night and day as I waited for book seven to come out last summer! In my book (pun intended), they’re up there with Anne of Green Gables, Little House on the Prairie, and Indian in the Cupboard.

Currently Reading. I got so many books for Christmas: Oscar Wilde, Ernest Hemingway, Charles Dickens, Mary Shelley, Jane Austen! My hubby is uber smart, and I dropped lots of hints that I wanted some classics on my bookshelves. I don’t know how I made it through my childhood without reading Mark Twain, so to make up for lost time, I read Tom Sawyer, The Prince and the Pauper, Huckleberry Finn, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, and Pudd’nhead Wilson last fall, and now I’m working my way through my collection of Charles Dickens (I just started Oliver Twist). And I have so many more to read! That’s what I love about reading—it never ends!

I’m not sure how one becomes a bibliophile or a reader (there is a difference, but I happen to be both), and I’m certainly not sure how I became obsessive and compulsive regarding either, but I am so glad those characteristics define parts of me. I am absolutely certain that had I not been a reader, I never would have become a writer. What about you? Are you a reader? Any recommendations for me?

 

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