New Years Resolutions

Maybe this will be the year that I pay off all my debt, lose the 10 extra pounds (and maybe 15 more for vanity’s sake), get promoted, conceive a child, program the guts of a brilliant web application that has been gestating in my brain for 2 years, and empty a compact full of eyeshadow.  Anyone else love using up and throwing out old makeup?  No?  It’s just me then. Oh well.

Sadly, all of those things were supposed to happen in 2011.  And before that, they were supposed to happen in 2010.  But I did manage to get the garage cleaned out last year.  Actually, the Husband did it.  Yup, I guess I have to call 2011 a big fat bust.  I did get a nice raise (by threatening to quit), but other than that, crap.

2012 seems like a good number.  I spent the first week of it blowing goobers of snot and blood out of my nose, but I’m sure 2012 can make that up to me.

I have been kicking butt on eating vegetables.  In the past 7 days, I have consumed at least 3 different vegetables every day.  I’ve had carrots, broccoli, corn, red & green peppers, red & white onions, winter squash, tomatoes, spinach, tomatillos, and brussels sprouts.  According to my mother-in-law, brussels sprouts are the new “in” vegetable.  I had no idea.  I need to keep up better on yuppie food trends.

Now it’s time for me to attempt to work my way out of the productivity nadir that was 2011. It’s kind of like the hangover of a bad year.  I think I’ll start by playing consecutive games of Mah Jong Tiles for the next six hours.

Irreconcilable Differences

No, not Kim Kardashian.

Just incompatible goals.

I want to send my husband through school, so that he can get a job and I can quit working.

I want to get my Masters Degree in Biological Sciences.

I want to have three kids.

I want to be promoted and successful in my career as a scientist, while I stay home and make my living off my part-time freelance programming business.

I want to build a house with beautiful quality materials, that isn’t pretentious or ostentatious.

Did I mention that I would love a classic Colonial with a grand staircase, and a 2nd floor library with it’s own balcony area?  For all my books, you know.

Where I can go to hide from the kids I so desperately want to stay home and spend all my time with.

I want to give tons of money to charity.  I want to pay for my hypothetical childrens’ educations.

I want to make my own wine, and cheese, and crochet an entire blanket, while I am doing graduate studies as a stay-at-home mom, who makes a six-figure salary as a successful scientist, in her pajamas, from the comfort of her 1500 sq foot Colonial complete with grand staircase, four bedrooms, spacious library, music room, and formal dining room, pursuing the epitome of worldly success and at the same time being the best Christian ever.

Maybe by the time I’m forty I’ll figure it out?

Tick, tock….

Flu is Bad, Science is Good

The only question is which of the following my husband is currently infected with:

  • A/California/7/2009 (H1N1)-like virus
  • A/Perth/16/2009 (H3N2)-like virus
  • B/Brisbane/60/2008-like virus

He has the flu, and I do not, thanks to… Science! – and the free flu vaccines at my place of employment.

This means that, at least for this year, scientists at the World Health Organization made a good prediction.  The three viruses listed above are the strains included in this year’s influenza vaccine, which are chosen by committee at the WHO.  If you follow the flu vaccine at all, you’ll notice that this year’s strains are the same as last year’s.  Apparently, our little virus enemies used up their burst of originality with the novel H1N1 strain from 2009, and are laying low for now.

I received the inactivated influenza vaccine (shot in the arm) this year.  Last year I got the attenuated nasal spray, although it is not generally indicated for people with asthma (like me).

If you haven’t gotten your flu shot yet, there is still time. For whatever reasons, vaccination is something people find reasons to put off. Perhaps it is innate optimism – ‘I never get sick!’ or ‘Flu only happens to people who don’t drink orange juice’. Just for the record, both of those sentiments are unreasonable. But you knew that.

Others may be concerned about the safety of vaccines. I was going to say “understandably concerned”, but realized that No, it is not really understandable. At all. While I have some sympathy for folks who don’t want to pay for a vaccine that may turn out to have been unnecessary, if you can get it for free, there is really no excuse.

Today’s vaccines are safe, effective, and ubiquitous. Get one.

Saturday with Jane

I didn’t have to go anywhere today.

Nevertheless, I woke up and quickly fell victim to a case of debilitating stress. It happens, most often when I have a huge list of to-dos, but none that demands immediate attention.  I cannot decide where to start, for everything needs doing at once – and my mind succumbs. One of the side-effects of an over-scheduled life, I guess.

Not proud of it.

Anyway, the hubby sent me back to bed, with a book, and instructions to read.  Anyone who has ever suffered from debilitating stress knows that I didn’t feel like reading, or sleeping, or doing anything.  My Cat, looking at me with utter disdain, eventually shamed me into picking up the book.  So, I read Persuasion cover to cover.

I love Jane Austen. I find myself speaking her prose for days afterward. I am acutely aware of how ridiculous I sound, in 2011, telling my husband that “comprehending the wind to be severe, I find myself disposed to take my exercise indoors” – and then popping in a P90x DVD.

Don’t pity him. Well he knows the danger of sending me to bed with Jane.

As a self-professed feminist, of course I must rationalize my adoration for old English tales where the endgame is the marriage of the heroine, preferably after the enigmatic, wealthy suitor has proposed more than once.

In defense, however, Austen dwells very briefly on actual professions of love, and the ultimate weddings merit hardly a paragraph – so terse, in fact, as to leave a romantic reader with a feeling of being short-shifted.

This is what reconciles me to Jane Austen:

While Austen’s heroines run the gamut of education, experience, “accomplishment”, wit, and intelligence, her ideal is a self-possessed woman blessed with clarity of thought, self-knowledge, and truthfulness.

The above characteristics have the convenient side-effect of attracting affection, but also make one deserving of affection.

I can support that.  Romanticism and feminism need not be mutually exclusive.  I am no historian; based on the complete introductions of her works written by better scholars than me, I understand that the idea of a woman thinking for herself and making her own judgments – logically rather than emotionally, and from a depth of understanding not expected from the sex – was revolutionary enough for the time.

And I’ll admit, I would be ready to greet the inevitable marriages of the heroines with forbearance, even if pages of romantic nonsense were dedicated to each.  Hypocrisy be d—-d.

Diving Headlong into Narcissism

There is something undeniably narcissistic about a personal blog, no?

I read many blogs.  I read News blogs, and Feminist blogs, and Christian blogs, and Political blogs, and generalized personal blogs.  Seems like everyone has a blog, an outlet for their outermost thoughts and feelings, interesting or not.  I come up with blog names, set up blogs, administrate blogs, and sell blogs to people, but I’ve never written one myself (until now, obviously).

Possibly I didn’t want to be a lemming.  Or felt that I would have nothing interesting to say.  Most likely, my personal brand of narcissism considers itself above the inane word-salad that fills many blog posts.

I suppose that’s the best *intellectual sneer* that a techie can come up with.  Or maybe, just the best one I can come up with.

I did it today.  I dove head-first into a delicious vat of middle-brow narcissism to bring the world this, my very first blog post.  And it is nice.  Don’t you think so?  Of course you do.

Paint art, in honor of my first blog post. Camille, 28th October 2011