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Monthly Archives: February 2012

Happy Super Monday everyone! This week we asked our friends to send us pictures specifically from their Super Bowl Sunday.  Thanks, guys!

Teddy – Naples, Florida

Saying goodbye to our awesome vacation resort.

Alan – Cleveland, Ohio

I have been cutting my own hair since I was 13; that is why I always look SO good.

Reyne – South Hampton, New York

Here is the cake I made for the Super Bowl. FYI: I am an Eagles fan.

David – San Francisco, California

We are at our friend’s house pigging out on food made by newly married women who are focused on being domestic. We bet on the total score for both teams at half time and the end of the game. We each bet two dollars. The winner at half time gets half the pot and the winner at the end gets the rest. A couple who is here, Mike and Farrell, are Giants fans so we are rooting for the Giants. Otherwise, people in San Francisco don’t really care because the 49ers lost two weeks ago and didn’t make the Super Bowl.

Lauren – Erie, Colorado

Baby Super Bowl Sunday dance party!

Jessica – Brooklyn, NY

This cup is SOOOOOOO CUTE!

Becky – Columbus, Ohio

The only pic I managed to snap was of one of the dishes I made, bacon-wrapped stuffed jalapeño thingies.

Jo – Brooklyn, New York

Tonight we were bowling and super bowling. There were neon lights, chicken wings, buckets full of beer…It felt like we were in a fancy patriotic discotheque. Heaven.

Julie – Erie, Colorado

The dogs looked like a scene from Clue.

A couple of years ago, my cousin told me about the book “The 5 Love Languages®” by Gary Chapman.  Though I haven’t read the book myself, I am very interested in its premise, which as I understand it states that each person has a primary love language.  It is the method by which feelings of love are translated into our outward ways of giving and receiving love.

The 5 languages Chapman identifies are:

  • Words of Affirmation – “Actions don’t always speak louder than words. If this is your love language, unsolicited compliments mean the world to you. Hearing the words, “I love you,” are important—hearing the reasons behind that love sends your spirits skyward. Insults can leave you shattered and are not easily forgotten.”
  • Quality Time – “In the vernacular of Quality Time, nothing says, “I love you,” like full, undivided attention. Being there for this type of person is critical, but really being there—with the TV off, fork and knife down, and all chores and tasks on standby—makes your significant other feel truly special and loved. Distractions, postponed dates, or the failure to listen can be especially hurtful.”
  • Receiving Gifts – “Don’t mistake this love language for materialism; the receiver of gifts thrives on the love, thoughtfulness, and effort behind the gift. If you speak this language, the perfect gift or gesture shows that you are known, you are cared for, and you are prized above whatever was sacrificed to bring the gift to you. A missed birthday, anniversary, or a hasty, thoughtless gift would be disastrous—so would the absence of everyday gestures.”
  • Acts of Service – “Can vacuuming the floors really be an expression of love? Absolutely! Anything you do to ease the burden of responsibilities weighing on an “Acts of Service” person will speak volumes. The words he or she most want to hear: “Let me do that for you.” Laziness, broken commitments, and making more work for them tell speakers of this language their feelings don’t matter.”
  • Physical Touch – “This language isn’t all about the bedroom. A person whose primary language is Physical Touch is, not surprisingly, very touchy. Hugs, pats on the back, holding hands, and thoughtful touches on the arm, shoulder, or face—they can all be ways to show excitement, concern, care, and love. Physical presence and accessibility are crucial, while neglect or abuse can be unforgivable and destructive.”

I think it’s interesting to consider the primary language of various people in your life.  It helps me remember that we are all love.  And though none of us speak exactly the same language, the ability to translate the messages we receive from one another’s heart connects us to what lies at each of our cores: love.

You can take the Love Languages quiz here.

LOVE image found here.

When I first saw the video below, I thought it was SO weird. As I watched it a second time, I couldn’t stop laughing. The video’s title is Prisecolinensinenciousol and is a parody by Adriano Celentano for an Italian TV program called Mileluci. It is sung entirely in gibberish and is supposed to sound like American English.

Not only is the dancing totally amazing in this video, but I find it hilarious that this is what English sounds like to Non-English speakers. Most American’s hardly recognize that they are not speaking English in this segment. So, please enjoy this hilarious video. Ciao!!

Let us introduce our fun-loving, cool, smart and beautiful cousin, Juanita. She is participating in an awesome letter-writing project in the month of February and graciously wanted to share it with you all. Here she is:

February: The Month of Letters

Author Mary Robinette Kowall decided to disconnect herself from the Internet for one month.  She informed her friends and family that they could still reach her by mail. She writes about how her decision became a yearly celebration in her life, and it’s now become a yearly challenge for anyone that cares to participate.

Because I’ve always loved carefully composing letters and constructing elaborate packages to send to my close friends, Kowall’s idea immediately appealed to me. Of course, twenty-nine mailings could become very difficult to keep up with, so I was determined to set myself up for success by starting the month with a) two packages instead of letters and b) the most effective brand of motivational guilt I know: when you know you really should – in the most ultimate, scale-expanding sense of the word – be doing something good, the sheer objectiveness of the obligation makes it nearly impossible not to procrastinate.  But, because inaction is The Wrong Thing To Do, in this circumstance, the compelling power of this kind of guilt increases exponentially with each passing second until you’re finally forced to acknowledge that the limit has shot off towards infinity. For me, infinity happens to be ALRIGHT, ALRIGHT, JUST FREAKIN’ DO IT ALREADY.

…Yep, I sent them to my mother.

To be fair to her/fill you all in, I was supposed to send my mother some things once I settled in after a recent move. That was June. So I think my mom deserves the first two days of my Month of Letters.  And knowing that she’ll love receiving anything with my name on it keeps me motivated to put extra thought into the presentation of my letters and packages. Since it’s now the 3rd of the month, I can only show you some of the stationary I’ve compiled for the rest of the week’s mailings.

It’s amazing how “before” images always excite me like nothing else: materials spread out like freshly fallen snow ready for sculpture. But they’re not anything in particular right now, just an array of paper and clipped pictures I’ve kept squirreled away for months; so the heart flutter surprises me. Why exactly am I so enthusiastic about this project?

On the way home from weekday errands, I listened to Brené Browns interview on The Smart People Podcast. She’s an author and authenticity researcher who specializes in the study of wholeheartedness, shame, and vulnerability as the birthplace of creativity. I am a huge sucker for enumeration, linguistically meticulous descriptions of the abstract, and that’s exactly what Brené does. (I have a feeling she might also get starry-eyed when she talks about the flexibility and precision of the English language.) Eleven minutes into the podcast, she says:

“…there’s some quote that says, ‘In my twenties and thirties, I worried about what everyone thought; in my forties and fifties, I stopped worrying about what people think; and then in my sixties, I realized no one was even thinking about me to begin with.” Here’s where we have to start with that: we are absolutely hardwired for connection. It is why we’re here … we are neurobiologically, at a cellular level, wired to be in connection with other people … When there is a lack of connection, when there’s disconnection, there’s always suffering – I don’t care if we’re talking about in a personal relationship or in an organizational culture, in a family, when there’s disconnection, there’s always struggle, there’s always suffering.”

She then goes on to define shame and creativity in the context of the vulnerability of human connections for a grand total of forty-one minutes that I, for one, will definitely spend on this interview again. By the time I pulled into my driveway, I had magnified my enthusiasm for this project under a lucid, focused lens of understanding.

A hand-written letter is a method of interpersonal connection. By constructing, composing, and adorning messages to my friends, I am re-presenting myself to them creatively. Each packet is something I’ve made that will become part of my connection to my friend as soon as they receive it. I hope these items carry my presence, as if I were standing right in front of them, handing them my letter personally, a bizarrely specific postmistress with the best job in the world.

All the while, I had been dwelling solely on the recipients. Even though The Month of Letters is for others, it is not something you can complete without realizing that the sender is an equally important entity. Who am I and why would I do this?

 

Last year, I wrested a bachelor’s degree away from an intensely competitive college, leapt out of my cozy Bostonian nest of friends, and immersed myself in a firmly established office culture – none of which can be considered transitional moves. In fact, they were simultaneous. I felt almost as if I had been watching one movie, fully engrossed in the plot and happily munching on snacks, gotten up to drizzle more butter-flavored sauce over my popcorn, and accidentally walked back into a different theatre playing an entirely different movie with the same actors. I’m only just now aware that this is not the story I thought it was, and keeping up has been so mentally demanding that I hadn’t taken the time to look around and realize that my friends weren’t in this theatre. I am ashamed to say that I hadn’t noticed that, underneath my active attention, not only have I been missing them dearly, but I’ve also become a neglectful friend through inaction, monopolizing the super-sized bag of popcorn because I wasn’t vigilant about staying within their reach anymore.

This is what The Month of Letters is about for me: putting forth extra effort to strengthen my connection for/with/to other people. Twenty-nine of them, to start. I encourage everyone to give it a shot, if only for a week. Even just jotting down a list of recipients can get you started, ideas snowballing into creation.

Hello my lovely people! I wanted to share with you this video project called Fifty People, One Question. The title of the project really speaks for itself. Fifty people are all asked the same question in different locations around the world. In these two videos, each person is asked, “Where would you like to wake up tomorrow?” I first watched these videos a couple of years ago, but was recently reminded of them and still feel as attracted as I originally did to the concept.

London:

Brooklyn:

I feel drawn to these videos for a couple of reasons. The first is because I like to ask people A LOT of questions myself. But most importantly, the real human emotion involved in these videos makes me choke up. Even when the answers are simple or boring, I still appreciate everyone’s face when they answer. I think it is interesting that some people use their imagination or answer with a fantasy place. Yet, I’m even more fascinated that most people say they would like to wake up in their own bedrooms. It is a nice reminder that we all like to feel safe, loved and comfortable. What can I say? I LOVE people. This video project is really beautiful to me.

Palindrome
by Lisel Mueller

There is less difficulty—indeed, no logical difficulty at all—in
imagining two portions of the universe, say two galaxies, in which
time goes one way in one galaxy and the opposite way in the
other. . . . Intelligent beings in each galaxy would regard their own
time as “forward” and time in the other galaxy as “backward.”
—Martin Gardner, in Scientific American

Somewhere now she takes off the dress I am
putting on. It is evening in the antiworld
where she lives. She is forty-five years away
from her death, the hole which spit her out
into pain, impossible at first, later easing,
going, gone. She has unlearned much by now.
Her skin is firming, her memory sharpens,
her hair has grown glossy. She sees without glasses,
she falls in love easily. Her husband has lost his
shuffle, they laugh together. Their money shrinks,
but their ardor increases. Soon her second child
will be young enough to fight its way into her
body and change its life to monkey to frog to
tadpole to cluster of cells to tiny island to
nothing. She is making a list:
            Things I will need in the past
                        lipstick
                        shampoo
                        transistor radio
                        Sergeant Pepper
                        acne cream
                        five-year diary with a lock
She is eager, having heard about adolescent love
and the freedom of children. She wants to read
Crime and Punishment and ride on a roller coaster
without getting sick. I think of her as she will
be at fifteen, awkward, too serious. In the
mirror I see she uses her left hand to write,
her other to open a jar. By now our lives should
have crossed. Somewhere sometime we must have
passed one another like going and coming trains,
with both of us looking the other way.
*

Lisel Mueller, “Palindrome” from Alive Together: New and Selected Poems.

*Leica M calendar 2012 here
*