Maybe you heard: Atlanta had some snow. So I've been stuck in my apartment for the last couple of days. I may also hold the distinction of being the only person in the city to make it home in 20 minutes on Tuesday (aka the day the snow and ice came). I knew my low-rent apartment located 1.5 miles away from the office would pay off in spades one day. Most people were not as lucky, including my mom who took 23 hours to get home, and slept in her car (this is why we both carry emergency supplies in our respective vehicles).
Anyway, it hasn't been so terrible. Buca and I had been Netflix-binging, reading, and sleeping 9-10 hours a day. You may have also noticed the "I'm single/childless" subtext of that sentence. *Shrug* The only thing I've run out of was dog food, so my critter has been eating cornflakes and snacks of peanut butter in his birthday Kong.
One unforeseen benefit of being home and stranded is it's a surprisingly excellent time to start a diet. Background: there's an attorney in the city who's opposing counsel in a large number of cases our firm takes. She really likes and respects my dad, and her sister passed away from cancer a few years ago, so she sort of took me under her wing, sending me little gifts after every round of chemo and radiation. I hadn't seen her in some time when we went to lunch a few weeks ago and she looked fantastic, having lost at least 20 pounds. I was interested in her secrets and she wonderfully decided to take me on as her dieting protegee. She's been doing some combination of The Thin Commandments and The South Beach Diet and so she gave me copies of both and told me to read the first four commandments and and Phase 1.
Blah blah blah... I'm four days into South Beach and it's not terrible.... Okay, that's totally a lie. Diets suck. I have semi-lustful feelings for carbs and anyone who believes "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels" is obviously eating the wrong stuff. I like vegetables. I like healthy food, I just get a little resentful when someone says it's all I can have. Among other things, I miss my favorite TV snack of real popcorn with a bit of butter and salt. Phase 1 of South Beach is only two weeks, and I can live two weeks without most carbs and red wine. And while I don't have to like it, I will like smaller, cuter dresses.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Fitbit Stats, Report 1
Today, I
learned to how to do/make a screen capture.
The only reason I wanted to do this was because I have yet to figure out
how to add an app to my Blogspot that will show my statistics automatically. Rome wasn’t built in a day.
Looking
at my chart, I think for the next report, I’d like to get to 60,000 steps and
45 flights of stairs. I should also probably sleep more.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Fitbit and Other Follies
I’ve
always been a person who’s motivated by the visual. To that end, my late Christmas present to
myself was a Fitbit One tracker. And I’ve totally become a disciple of the
Fitbit in the 10 days I’ve owned it.
There are several models one can buy; I picked the clip-on version that
tracks your steps, basal (not “basil” as I keep misspelling) metabolic rate,
and sleep patterns. I don’t really know
what kind of sorcery it uses to make this magic happen, but it does, and holy
crap, is it cool.
I
definitely notice that I’m challenging myself more and taking extra trips and
steps, even when I don’t have to. I’m
sure I’m driving people at work crazy, as I seem to get up and walk more than
they do, but I can always tell them my doctor wants me to move around as I’m at
risk for blood clots (which is actually true, so it makes an excellent
excuse).
The
coolest thing to track is my basal metabolic rate. I don’t exactly understand the science behind
all of it, but it’s basically the number of calories you’re burning through the
day naturally and can vary with your weight.
Even on my laziest days at home, I was still burning a minimum of 2,100
calories per day. So, theoretically, I
could eat 1,500-1,600 calories per day and still be on a weight-loss
track. Excellent. (Please visualize an
evil genius of your choice tapping his fingers.)
In the
job-hunting forum, I’m racking my brain, trying to think of every person I know
in the education field that I can remind I’m job-hunting. Per a networking meeting, I was told to get
in touch with the principal of one of the best private schools in the
city. I have a cover letter ready to go
and I’m just paralyzed with fear to send it.
It’s really well-written, brief-yet-informative… all the things you want
a cover letter (with resume attached) to be.
But making a leap and giving someone even a small chance to reject you is
just terrifying.
My
therapist says I worry too much. I hope
he doesn’t charge me for that insight, as it isn’t news to anyone who’s met me
ever.
I’m also
making headway on my second goal of the year, which is to increase my writing
output via this blog (and in life). My
writers’ group had its first meeting last week and we set goals for
ourselves. Mine include more blog posts,
work on my bridesmaids play, and to start drafting a story I have in mind for a
screenplay.
In the
Miscellaneous Problems section of life, with the cold weather of late, my dog
keeps sneaking onto my bed while I’m sleeping.
I should kick him off, and do if he wakes me up, but it’s really hard to
mad at a supercute creature who just wants to snuggle with me and wags his tail
even when he sees me in my early-morning glory.
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Victory... Take 2
For
those of you just joining me, let me recap the last few years and the origins
of this blog: In 2011, I finished grad
school with an MAT in English Education.
Because we graduated in August (awkward time of year to begin a teaching
job search), my dad and his partners let me work at the family law firm in the
interim. In November of that year, I
started to get all manners of sick.
Night sweats, vomiting, weight loss, congestion. I assumed I had bronchitis because I didn’t
want to be a panic-monger and believe what the WebMD was telling me.
After a
miserable holiday season, my dad’s paralegal/my friend demanded my dad send to
his personal physician (who’s also his best friend). Long story short, they found a shadow, and I
find out a few days later I have Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma.
And fade to black.
Obviously
a lot more happened. This blog alone
chronicles the initial cancer journey.
When I started the blog, it was meant to be a voice for young-adult
cancer. Sadly, it’s only now becoming a
thing, and there still isn’t a lot of data or research on what my long-term
prognosis is. Thankfully, the odds of
the lymphoma not coming back are in my favor.
The treatment was rough though.
After some horribly aggressive and painful chemotherapy and radiation,
I’m now more at risk for breast, lung, and thyroid cancer.
The
blog’s original title was created by someone (me, in case you were confused)
who believed “victory” simply meant curing the cancer I had at the time, and
liked the punniess of the title (I was on a lot of heavy medication). Almost a year and a half after finishing
treatment, “victory” means… Well, I’m not sure exactly. I know my cancer is cured, but life and my
spirit aren’t.
I have a
nice therapist, excellent friends, a good Sunday school class, a much better relationship with my
dad, and no excessive amount of hospital debts.
But I still suffer from insecurity over my future, and my body took a
beating. My body is really what led to
the rebirth of this blog.
As you
can imagine, chemo and radiation can be bad enough in themselves. My tumor was 14 cm by 12 cm before we caught
it and managed to damage my lungs, my heart, create hairline fractures to the
breastbone, and paralyze a nerve down the left side of my body (resulting in a
paralyzed vocal cord and left diaphragm).
As a result, I feel like I haven’t been able to take a deep breath since
November of 2011 and I’ve also put on about 50 pounds since college.
A close
friend invited me to be a bridesmaid at her wedding in October of this
year. As things stand now, I’ll be the
only single bridesmaid, as all the others will be married by that time, or are
married now. I don’t mind being single
at a wedding; I just don’t want them to look at me and think, “Well,
obviously.”
2013
wasn’t bad per se, but my only standard to make it a good year was “Don’t get
cancer again.” Hence, my new definition
of victory has become creating a life I can be proud of. I’ll be chronicling my job search for a
teaching position, my weight loss victories, and general musings as I blunder
through life. Armed with a trainer,
more cookbooks than the CIA, and this fine blog, 2014 will be the year of
change.
True story: This was my fortune from my lunch cookie today. |
I don’t plan on most entries
being this long, don’t worry. And if
sarcasm and cynicism aren’t funny to you, I am not your blogging soul mate.
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