Run Amy Run

Posted by amy at September 16th, 2007

Dear Friends and Family,

Run Amy Run
I’ve been incredibly fortunate in not knowing anyone directly affected by breast cancer – I’d have to go out two or three degrees of separation to find a breast cancer survivor. Since I’m adopted, it is quite possible that I am at an increased risk of getting the disease, but of course, none of us (not even men!) is immune to the risk.

On my 38th birthday this summer, I couldn’t run for 2 minutes straight, let alone a 5k. I wanted to change that. I began a couch-to-5k program on a Monday, and on Tuesday found out about the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure – a 5k race to raise money to prevent, treat and cure breast cancer.

In the past three months, I’ve been training daily, slowly increasing my run-to-walk ratio, and yesterday I did my first full practice 5k – without walking once!

If you are like me, you hate asking people for money. But the theme of this year’s race is “Friends Asking Friends” and I hope that you will indulge me in this one request.

As part of the Race, I’ve created my own Personal Pledge Page to which you can make a pledge of $25, $50, $100 or any amount (could you give up the cost of a cup of coffee, a pack of smokes, a book or even a skein or sock yarn, for example?) Simply follow the link or you can visit www.komenmassrace.org and then click the “Donate to a Participant” link (left side) and search for my name.

Thanks for all your support!

Amy

Posted in 5K| 1 Comment | 

back in the saddle again

Posted by amy at September 6th, 2007

This morning, I sent my daughter off to her first day of Kindergarten and my son off to Pre-K. How did they get so big, so fast?
Back To School

Posted in words and sounds| No Comments | 

Show and Share

Posted by amy at July 18th, 2007

Did you know that preschools don’t have show and tell anymore, they have show and share. I’m not sure that “tell” is a bad word, but it is preschool and they are indoctrinating our children to share and play well with others, so I guess I can’t complain too much.

I just saw this on youtube and and wanted to show and share with you:

This was built in a project called Second Life, which is a virtual world that has some real word applications.

Posted in new media| 1 Comment | 

Olfactory Blues*

Posted by amy at July 12th, 2007

Fairee House

I’ve been suffering from olfactory blues lately, an odd affliction, really. It started with a yearning for the smell that greets you when you wake up in forest in the northeast on a summer morning, after a night of camping, with a tale or two told around the campfire. There is a fresh, dewy green smell from the foliage, combined with a damp smoky trace from the embers - the smell to me is happiness, excitement and contentment rolled into one.

I’ve been hinting pushing for a family camping trip, all summer, but I’m getting some resistance. The resistance is entirely realistic and grounded in a fairly correct assessment of our current situation, but that hasn’t dissuaded me. Rather than barreling over my family with bruit force, I am trying to be more subtle. We are starting with day trips to the local state parks.

I believe that there are two kinds of people in this world, river/ocean people and lake people. My father was a lake person, my husband is a lake person, my son is leaning towards being a lake person. If the water doesn’t move, I don’t really want to be around it, and I tell you this because it predisposes me to favor certain kinds of state parks, which will be come perfectly clear.

Several weeks ago, I thought I’d broach the camping subject very carefully by proposing that we go check out the camping sites at Savoy State Part. Savoy is the closest to our house (a mere 1.8 miles from our home, if we needed to break down camp and be home in 15 minutes.) DH summed up the trip nicely on his blog shortly after the event. Savoy may have rivers in the park, but this is a pond campground, so I wasn’t too eager to go back.

Two weeks ago, we strapped the bike, trailer and the wee ride seat on the car and headed downhill a bit to the Windsor State Forest. DH dropped the kids and I off at the top of the road leading to the campground, we rode our bikes downhill and met him at the point where they damn up the river to make a swimming hole. DH and the kids fished while I sat at a picnic table and knit. We then drove up and hiked around the Windsor Jambs, which were just incredible. The park had campgrounds, as well as a fairly small circuit of trails. Being a river park, this one rated much higher on my scale, and I was starting to put together more pieces of the camping puzzle.

Last weekend we met up with another couple we know from swimming lesson and their daughter and at Clarksburg State Park. We got there a little early and drove a lap around the campground, which was much more crowded than the previous two had been. As we drove around, I rolled down my window and stuck my head out like a puppy yearning for the breeze. The smell was dense, musty and green but it wasn’t quite the smell I needed, that I remembered. We met up at the beach on the opposite side of the pond from the campground and had a perfectly lovely day. I knit like a fiend on a sock I was trying to finish, the kids played, the men fished, the moms chatted. And it was a perfectly lovely park, for a pond park that is.

I think my next proposal may have some appeal. DH has consented to consider spending the night in a yurt, and I’ve found a state park with one that still has a few available nights left. October Mountain State Forest, south of here in Lee is the largest state park in the system. It has lakes, streams and more trails than I could hope to cover in one day.

I’m keeping my fingers crossed that I’ll find a way to cure these olfactory blues before the season passes and I’ll have to wait till next year.


*Up until a few minutes ago minute ago, when I searched, I could have sworn that the name of this song was Olfactory Blues. Turns out the name is actually Lawn Boy. Here are the actual lyrics:

Phish - Lawn Boy Lyrics

Throughout the night
when there’s no direct light
and a thin veil of clouds
keeps the stars out of sight

I can smell the colors
outside on my lawn
the moist green organic
that my feet tread upon

and the black oleander
surrounded by blues
I’m soon overwhelmed
by olfactory hues


Related Links:
No Child Left Inside - a special initiative designed to encourage Massachusetts families and visitors to enjoy all the recreational resources and outdoor activities that Massachusetts state parks have to offer! From Cape Cod, to Boston to the Berkshire Hills, it’s time to discover the fresh air and fun of the great outdoors!

Department of Conservation and Recreation the state agency that oversees the state parks.

Berkshire Botanical Garden, where the above photo was taken of Alex’s fairee house.

Reserve America an online reservation system for campgrounds in North America.

Posted in words and sounds| 1 Comment | 

A little push in the right direction

Posted by amy at July 7th, 2007

I finished week 1 of my couch to 5 k. While surfing around my knittingblogs yesterday, I saw that friend Julia at Moth Haven signed up for a 5k in Boston this September. This is the Susan G. Koman Race for A Cure - and I immediately joined her group Spun to Run (get it, knitters, spun … ). My personal fundraising goal is $500.00 and while I usually don’t solicite for these types of things, I am going to ask readers of this blog to think about looking under their couch cushions and donating a buck or two. It all adds up, right?

You can donate by clicking on the button below, and I’ll add the button to my sidebar one of these days.

5K

Posted in 5K| No Comments | 

welcome to july

Posted by amy at July 3rd, 2007

Cate & Mom

I updated my reading list on the lower right hand corner of the site. You can tell that it is summer by the titles I’ve added. I have no beach time planned in July, but you’d never know it from the books I picked.

Remember last winter when I did the 100 mile challenge? Well, I have identified a trend and my mid-life quest continues. On the eve of my 38th birthday, I completed a high ropes course without crying, and two weekends ago, I managed to not puke during a 90 minute hot yoga flow class in Boston. The next day, I jumped at the opportunity to hoist the main sail on a schooner trip through Gloucester harbor.

My next challenge is a bit less exciting, but just as demanding. I’m doing the Cool Running Couch to 5k plan - as delivered through this amazing podcast. I have one more run tonight to be through week one, and then will start week 2 tomorrow.

Unfortunately, my dear, protective husband has forbidden me from undertaking my next challenge till the kids graduate from college, but I guess that means I have 15 years to prepare to learn how to surf.

Happy Independence Day Everyone!

Posted in words and sounds| 3 Comments | 

5 things about me …

Posted by amy at June 14th, 2007

Ali, the top chef over at cleaner plate club tagged me for a meme, and so in keeping with the food theme, here are 5 things about me, the culinary edition.

1 - I don’t like mushrooms. I am really good at picking them out of dishes, but I did go through a period of time where I told the waitstaff I was alergic to them, to impress upon them that a mushroom shouldn’t even share the same air with my plate. Last night, I tried to get my 5 year old to try something on the table besides her beloved chicken wings with duck sauce, I even promised her I would eat a muchroom if she did, but alas, she failed to take me up on the offer.

2 - I love and miss seafood. Raw, steamed, grilled, baked in the oven or in seaweed at the beach, I love seafood - but I’m alergic to oysters. I found this out on my first valentine’s day date with my (now) husband. Unfortunately for him, I found this out after he paid the bill. The longer story is much funnier, but you’ll have to buy me a sushi role to hear it.

3 - It is hard to live with carnivores. If it didn’t roam the earth, darling DH doesn’t have room for it on his plate. The sounds of teeth on bones echos through our dining room as I’m constantly casting off my naugthy bits of beef to the ravenous horde. You’d think my husband’s family descended from a tribe of lions instead of generations of Ivy League educated humans.

4 - Until two years ago, I was not capable of eating any food with a hot pepper based spice (I could do wasabi for some reason - mustard based). Then one day, on a whim, I put one slice of a jalapeno pepper on a plate of roased veggies and my tongue exploded. Suddeny I was craving spicy, I suddenly got Indian and Thai cuisine. Life was now in color.

5. At the end of every Grateful Dead show, I roamed the parking lot looking for a “kind veggie bagel” a bagel with a thin smear of cream cheese, cukembers and sprouts, maybe onions and tomato. It was the perfect food to eat while wandering the lot looking for the perfect hair hand or beaded earings. The coolness of the cukember combined with the sweet cream cheese, softened my throat after a night of being in a smokey arena, and the bagel gave me energy for at least an hour of dancing in the drum circle back at the camp site.

I am going to tag Greg, and hope he’ll tell us five things he loves to cook …

Posted in Berkshires, words and sounds| 3 Comments | 

Cheap Houses

Posted by amy at June 1st, 2007

Boston.com has a link up today featuring what they call cheap houses, houses under 300K in the Boston area. The first house they show is a 3 bed, 1.5 bath, with 1,400 sq. Listed at $299,900

For well under $250K, you can move into this home on my street, the house has 5 Bed, 2 Bath, 3,820 Sq. Ft. on 0.22 Acres, with views of Mt. Greylock, walk to school and town. That is also one of the most expensive houses for sale in town. This one, for $175 may be one of my favorites right now.

We have high speed internet access, independent coffee shops, a thriving art scene, a growing economy and great restaurants near by. We don’t have any traffic to speak of, crime is fairly low, and the sunsets are spectacular. We also have a growing number of tech jobs that we can’t fill locally.

I have a dream that our town, the birthplace of Susan B. Anthony, will someday become a haven for lesbian couples with children, that I’ll see rainbow bumper stickers on the back of subaru wagons lining the streets, but I would image that more straight couples would be welcome here as well.

How much house are you getting for your dollar? What kind of life would you live if you weren’t working just to pay your mortgage?

Posted in Berkshires| 1 Comment | 

WE MATTER

Posted by amy at May 24th, 2007

“I hereby announce the formation of WEstern MAssachusetts Total Territorial Equity Regiment.
That’s right: WE MATTER”

Mortar Bend has a great post up about living in the hinterlands of Massachusetts, you can read it here.


Chris Brogan - one of my new blog crushes - has a post up today about a DIY autobiography kit. He encouraged his readers to post this form, fill it out, and then leave a comment back. Feel free to read his page, swipe the list and leave me a comment if you are so inspired.

A Quick Sketch Biography of Amy

The thing most people know me for is my job - I tend to be a bit evangelical about the power of the internet to bridge divides and nurture community.

The people I associate the most with are migratory - people who have never left their hometown scare me.

People who have influenced my life are… my family and former teachers, I can’t think of a major professional influence up until my current boss.

One challenge I took on and overcame was… I wasn’t working in a field I wanted to be in, so I took a year off to retrain myself for the career I wanted, not the career I had.

My early years, before you probably got to know me were spent trying to find a way to reconcile my penchant for being outrageous with my deep seeded need to be accepted.

You might not know this, but I am adopted.

I’m passionate about my children, my marriage and not living life by default.

In the next year or two, I hope to climb to the top of Mt. Greylock.

Posted in Berkshires| 3 Comments | 

How Glad I Am

Posted by amy at May 11th, 2007

My Podcast Playlist is a bit eclectic

  • Accident Hash - A Boston based music show playing “podsafe” music. I liken it to college radio for the 30something set
  • Cast On - A knitting podcast, which doesn’t do it justice in any way, good music, good stories and some yarn talk thrown in.
  • Fit-Pod - workout mixes
  • Jaybird’s Endless Boundaries - Used to be just a phish podcast, now mostly jam bands
  • Looking Out The Window - The stories behind the songs
  • Managing The Gray - New Media Marketing
  • MCLA Podcast - my podcast for the college
  • Nugcast - More jam bands
  • The Dead Show - A weekly hour of the best live Grateful Dead music
  • This American Life - you know that quirky NPR show

Most of the new music shows I’ll enjoy, but not really pay attention to. Every once in a while, a song will grab hold of me. Last year, around this time, I heard Noam Weinstein’s “When I Get My Shit Together” on Cast On and that became our family anthem for the summer, my children loved singing along (yes, I am the worst mommy ever). This past spring, it was Black Lab’s “Mine Again” which I still listen to frequently, but I mistakenly bought the album and not just the single on I-Tunes, and found the rest of the album wasn’t up to the same standard.

Just a few days ago, I was listening to Nugscast and was blown away by a song called “How Glad I Am” by the Grayboy Allstars. This is a poppy love song, which isn’t usually my thing, but the song has a hook, the singing is fantastic and it just may be the best single of 2007.

If you’ve got a buck, download the song and tell me what you think (or you can listen for free by downloading the podcast - http://www.nugs.net/nugscast/070418.aspx)

Posted in words and sounds| 2 Comments | 

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