Remember the guy who videotaped a bag in American Beauty...
Ya - I feel like him today.
Why?
Well, after owning a sweet DSLR camera since Christmas and taking lessons, today I finally had a chance to bust that baby out and practice taking pictures. There's not much that I cared to photograph in my neighborhood.
So after walking around annoyed at the lack of photo-ops, I noticed a chip bag in the grass. Maybe it was the influence of Wes' character in American Beauty, but the bag called to me. Heck - at least I could practice Aperture.
So, the first picture I am officially sharing with the world is this shot of a chip bag:
I have a lot to learn, but with the upcoming adventures Joe and I are going on, there will be lots of chances to practice!
And I'll aim for some more exciting shots moving forward ;)
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Born-Again Bookworm
I was a bookworm my entire childhood.
As a kid, I'd stay up past my bedtime - flashlight in hand and the covers over my head - as I sneaked chapter after chapter.
As a tween, when the rest of my class would get caught playing with their Tamagotchi pets under their desks, I would be caught with a paperback in hand.
As a teen, the number one priority when it came to choosing a new purse wasn't the color, style, or designer - it was whether it could successfully house at least one hardcover.
But when college arrived with its pages and pages of daily mandatory reading (ah, the joys of a Jesuit education), I stopped. I probably have more toes than books I chose to read during those four years.
I expected to pick it up again once I graduated, after-all, I now had the time to read for pleasure rather than reading books like this. But I didn't. For three more years I'd start a book every now and then, but rarely have the interest to actually finish one.
Myexcuse reasoning was this:
Why would I read books when I had my iPhone to play with? Or TMZ to read? Or TV to watch? Heck, with DVR, Netflix, and Hulu Plus - there's always something to watch. And watching is easier than reading. I don't have to think. If I do want to think, I can play my bubble game while I watch. I can't play my bubble game while reading a book. Plus, I'm exhausted. Life makes me tired. If I read then I'll just fall asleep.
But then came my honeymoon - and relaxing by the pool with a book in one hand and a frozen Mai Tai in the other sounded pretty fun. I had heard of a series called The Hunger Games, which seemed somewhat appealing, so I bought the first book and shoved it in my suitcase.
To my surprise, that book transformed me back into the ravenous reader I once was - I devoured page after page. In fact, when I woke up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom (multiple frozen Mai Tais will do that to you), I'd actually read a couple chapters before going back to bed.
Boy had I missed that feeling.
It didn't take me long to finish, and then I needed the sequel - stat! My poor husband drove me around the island searching for a bookstore until I found it - for $20. Though much cheaper on Amazon, I couldn't wait, and frugal Joe said he didn't mind me buying it (suurrree - but I didn't question it!).
After loving The Hunger Games so much, I started dabbling in other YA dystopian books. I found a few that I enjoyed, but I'd read them at a snail's pace.
I was back in "the real world" with my iPhone, TMZ, DVR, Netflix, Hulu Plus . . .
My brief stint as a born-again bookworm had passed.
I was better than I was in college, but not by much. People would refer to me as a reader and I'd feel like a fraud. And with all of my electronic distractions, I was starting to feel like I was going crazy (watching TV while playing the bubble game for hours a day will do that to you). My mind wouldn't stop. Frankly, it was making me depressed.
So last week I picked up a book and resolved to devote less time to bright colors on screens and more times to something that once was such a huge part of my life.
It took a little to get into, but last night I felt like that ravenous reader again. Mid-way through (The Maze Runner in case you are curious), I couldn't make myself stop. For two and a half hours, I was back to being that little girl in bed with the flashlight past her bedtime. When I finished, I couldn't wait to start the sequel.
It's one book, sure, but it feels different. I went to bed early to read, I actually read during daylight hours on the weekend, and I stayed up until midnight last night to finish it. That hasn't happened since The Hunger Games and, before that, since before college.
What a fool I have been to have given up something I love so much.
No longer.
Thanks The Maze Runner :)
As a kid, I'd stay up past my bedtime - flashlight in hand and the covers over my head - as I sneaked chapter after chapter.
As a tween, when the rest of my class would get caught playing with their Tamagotchi pets under their desks, I would be caught with a paperback in hand.
As a teen, the number one priority when it came to choosing a new purse wasn't the color, style, or designer - it was whether it could successfully house at least one hardcover.
But when college arrived with its pages and pages of daily mandatory reading (ah, the joys of a Jesuit education), I stopped. I probably have more toes than books I chose to read during those four years.
I expected to pick it up again once I graduated, after-all, I now had the time to read for pleasure rather than reading books like this. But I didn't. For three more years I'd start a book every now and then, but rarely have the interest to actually finish one.
My
Why would I read books when I had my iPhone to play with? Or TMZ to read? Or TV to watch? Heck, with DVR, Netflix, and Hulu Plus - there's always something to watch. And watching is easier than reading. I don't have to think. If I do want to think, I can play my bubble game while I watch. I can't play my bubble game while reading a book. Plus, I'm exhausted. Life makes me tired. If I read then I'll just fall asleep.
But then came my honeymoon - and relaxing by the pool with a book in one hand and a frozen Mai Tai in the other sounded pretty fun. I had heard of a series called The Hunger Games, which seemed somewhat appealing, so I bought the first book and shoved it in my suitcase.
To my surprise, that book transformed me back into the ravenous reader I once was - I devoured page after page. In fact, when I woke up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom (multiple frozen Mai Tais will do that to you), I'd actually read a couple chapters before going back to bed.
Boy had I missed that feeling.
It didn't take me long to finish, and then I needed the sequel - stat! My poor husband drove me around the island searching for a bookstore until I found it - for $20. Though much cheaper on Amazon, I couldn't wait, and frugal Joe said he didn't mind me buying it (suurrree - but I didn't question it!).
After loving The Hunger Games so much, I started dabbling in other YA dystopian books. I found a few that I enjoyed, but I'd read them at a snail's pace.
I was back in "the real world" with my iPhone, TMZ, DVR, Netflix, Hulu Plus . . .
My brief stint as a born-again bookworm had passed.
I was better than I was in college, but not by much. People would refer to me as a reader and I'd feel like a fraud. And with all of my electronic distractions, I was starting to feel like I was going crazy (watching TV while playing the bubble game for hours a day will do that to you). My mind wouldn't stop. Frankly, it was making me depressed.
So last week I picked up a book and resolved to devote less time to bright colors on screens and more times to something that once was such a huge part of my life.
It took a little to get into, but last night I felt like that ravenous reader again. Mid-way through (The Maze Runner in case you are curious), I couldn't make myself stop. For two and a half hours, I was back to being that little girl in bed with the flashlight past her bedtime. When I finished, I couldn't wait to start the sequel.
It's one book, sure, but it feels different. I went to bed early to read, I actually read during daylight hours on the weekend, and I stayed up until midnight last night to finish it. That hasn't happened since The Hunger Games and, before that, since before college.
What a fool I have been to have given up something I love so much.
No longer.
Thanks The Maze Runner :)
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