Tuesday, January 12, 2016

A Year in Review (2015)

2015- The Best Of!

Oh geez... the years just keep flying by!  Goodness!  Here are some of my favorites from 2015.  

Top 3 New Favorite Albums (in no particular order):



1. Brandi Carlile- The Firewatcher's Daughter
2. Sugar & The Hi Lows- High Roller
3. Erykah Badu- But You Caint Use My Phone

BONUS:

Andra Day- Cheers to the Fall

Top 3 New Favorite Fiction Books (in no particular order):



1. The Bullet by Mary Louise Kelly
2. The Diver's Tomb Lies Empty by Vendela Vida
3. Purity by Jonathan Franzen

Top 3 New Favorite Non-Fiction Books (in no particular order):



1. Missoula by Jon Krakauer
2. Rising Strong by Brene Brown
3. Wildflower by Drew Barrymore

BONUS:


Tyler Knott Gregson (um, hello, obviously)

Top 3 favorite books read this year (but published outside of 2015):



1. All the Lights We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
2. Euphoria by Lily King
3. Pole Dancing to Gospel Hymns by Andrea Gibson




Let's Talk About Books Baby!

December

Books Bought
Fall of Giants By: Ken Follett
 Year of Yes By: Shonda Rhimes (audible)
Rising Strong By: Brene Brown
Daring Greatly By: Brene Brown
Things I Would Like To Do With You By: Waylon Lewis
Spirit Junkie By: Gabrielle Bernstein (audible)
A Clash of Kings By: George R.R. Martin (audible)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone By: J.K. Rowling (audible)

Books Read 
Luckiest Girl Alive By: Jessica Knoll
 Year of Yes By: Shonda Rhimes (audible)
 Things I Would Like To Do With You By: Waylon Lewis
Wanderlust: A Modern Yogi's Guide to Discovering Your Best Self By: Jeff Krasno 
The Bullet By: Mary Louise Kelly
Salt By: Nayyirah Waheed
Spirit Junkie By: Gabrielle Bernstein (audible)

Wow guys! Another crazy year has come to an end!!! I can't believe how fast the time is flying by!

December was a pretty big book month for me... that's bound to happen with colder weather, snow days, holidays, and longer weekends!

Let's just talk about Books Read shall we?

Starting from the top...

Luckiest Girl Alive- this one was entertaining and as a Colorado teen of the 90's I knew where it was going... There is something to be said for high school and the pressure of cliques and we all know how the 90's ended.  I think because of personal history and interest in the topic this fictional rendition of a scene that has become all too familiar was intriguing to me.

Year of Yes LOVE this book!  I should've known since I'm a fan of Shonda Rhimes shows... but as of her personally all I've ever known is how she has conflict with Katherine Heigl who I love so I don't know what I was expecting.  But I loved it.  Very motivational and real.  Good book for the new year!

Things I Would Like To Do With You Ok this book is by a local author, creator of Elephant Journal.  I decided to support this project on Kickstarter and within the time of supporting it and paying 40 bucks and never getting updates I actually met people who know him personally and claim he's kind of a gigantic douche.  Secondhand personal opinions aside.... I liked the idea of this book more than I liked the actual book.  It's romantic for sure, and at times a little indulgent... but it's one man's manifesto of the love he's had and the love he's looking for. Very Boulder in the sense of it's organic and Buddhist.  Read it to see what I mean.

Wanderlust I finally finished this beast and I think it is a fantastic introduction into all the areas of yoga.  The physical practice, the Gods, the food, the community, the meditations, the reasons why, the history.  It touches on everything and asks the reader important questions.  Great coffee table addition!

The Bullet  I've said it before and I'll say it again. Mary Louise Kelly writes the kind of books that should be turned into movies! Love it! And I love the way the women in her stories are always in fascinating cities, single, and intelligent.  Good thriller!

Nayyirah Waheed.... I was given you as a gift for Christmas, and Wow!!!  Here are some of my faves:

the thing you are most
afraid to write.

write that.

---advice to young writers


'i love myself.'
the
quietest.
simplest.
most
powerful.
revolution.
ever

---ism


as a child 
there was either
books
or 
pain.
i chose books.

---how i became a writer


africa does not need your tears.
or
your prayers.
or
your money.
or
your t-shirts.
or 
your telethons.
or
your hands ever so lovingly placed
on her buttocks.
your mouth at her breasts.
your fists in her eyes.
she wants you to stop pissing in her face
and calling it water.

Good, right?!?!?!
There were so many poems... just small little morsels that leave a taste.  I'm still mulling some of them over and trying to understand ways that I have maybe struck someone in my ignorance of their culture, or what it means to be them.  Very powerful, very impactful.  Will be reading more by this poet in the future!

And lastly.... Spirit Junkie
I like Gabrielle.  I like her whole vibe.  I'll be listening to this one again, so many lessons to learn and again things to mull over.  I feel I have a lot to learn from this author.
That's it! Another year of reading over.  What will 2016 bring?  What will I discover? Who will move me?  I'm excited for what's to come!
 

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Let's Talk About Books Baby!

November



  Books Bought
Avenue of Mysteries By: John Irving
A Game of Thrones By George R.R. Martin (Audible)

Books Read
Fates & Furies By: Lauren Groff
The Untethered Soul By: Michael A. Singer (Audible)
Wildflower By: Drew Barrymore

November!  Important things to note... I've decided to start over with Game of Thrones (again)... now that I'm completely addicted to the show and I feel I have a better grasp on the millions of characters, I'm thinking the books will be more interesting this time around!  We'll see.

Also, as you can see... I got to meet Chelsea Clinton... meaning that me and Ash now have the whole family's books signed by them! How exciting!  I was nervous as all get out!  I think because Chelsea and I are close in age and she is so accomplished, I just felt nervous.  But she was very sweet!  As I knew she would be! :-) 

As for books read... the #1 book of the year making all the end of year lists: Fates & Furies... I'm not really seeing what the big fuss is about.  I didn't think either of the two characters were relate-able and their story was kind of weird.  I get it was supposed to be a realistic portrayal of marriage, but if you ask me nothing will ever beat Revolutionary Road when it comes to this arena. 

On to Untethered Soul, me oh my... I get what this book was doing.  You can be an observer of your thoughts, acknowledge them, and let them go.  If it was that easy we would all be doing exactly that.  There are reasons we harp on things.  Yes, some of us do it more than others.... but isn't what makes us all human is that we react to life?!?!  I get it, we should strive to be more present, let go of the past and things we can't control... but after awhile this message got redundant.  If we literally could just acknowledge everything how would we ever have the opposite emotions on the other side of the pendulum?  The joy, love, etc.  If we are just supposed to acknowledge and let go of everything... wouldn't we just be robots?  I don't know, I like yoga and I like meditation but sometimes when you start analyzing things as much as this book did, well, that's just as annoying as what the book was saying you shouldn't be doing. Oy.  

Let it go, let it go, let it go (sung to the tune of Let it Snow).

Next.

Drew, oh Drew how us that love the 90's worship you!  I had forgotten so many wonderful things and reading this book was like taking a walk down memory lane.  Drew writes casually, but she definitely delves into important things... like how to get ready for a relationship and how to be a person with a cause.  This was a delightful read!  

What have you been reading lately?  Any suggestions?

Friday, November 6, 2015

Portland

Portlandia

The following are scribbles from my actual travel journal...


October 8th- I don't know what made me book a ticket to Portland, I guess it was that craving, that lust that those of us bitten by the travel bug eventually have to succumb to.

I recognized the feeling the second that I took a seat on the light rail, the feeling was overwhelming and completely present.  Exploration. Adventure.  Not knowing, yet being completely content.  I met a girl on the train from Denver, Katie, she's in Portland for an acro-yoga festival, she went to CU.  We kept making eye contact, she had the smile that those on an adventure wear.  I liked her, she had to get off the train because she figured out she was going the wrong way.  She hopped off with cheers of, "It was nice to meet you, enjoy Portland!"

The train makes it's way deeper into the city; a train employee chases off a clearly homeless and disturbed man, the whole train car breathes a sigh of relief.

We cross the river, we stop by a tavern and a nice looking man raises a window shade from inside the restaurant and he immediately starts taking chairs off tables.  It's his routine, this is where he lives, this is where he works.  

I come to my stop and get off dragging my suitcase behind.  I am instantly aware that I don't know where I am going as all the other commuters bustle around me.

I plug the address of my final destination into my phone, knowing that this will drain what's left of my battery.  And I begin to walk.

I come across the most beautiful park.

Autumn is here in Portland.  You can feel it in the air, the chill at the end of your nose.  It's there in the way the smell of smoke is sticking to smokers clothes, you can see it in the colors and the varieties of leaves littered across the path.  

Across the park is the cafe my friend suggested. 

I enter.  It is warm... and cozy.  A corner table opens right near the window.  I tuck my suitcase in the corner, set some things on the table to claim it as my own and head to the counter to place an order for a pesto chicken panino and a large latte.


I get back to my table, pull my notebook out of my suitcase and start recording my thoughts.  The server sets my food and latte down.  The steam rising from the cup, the notebook, this scratched table... it's so cute, so quaint.  I must instagram this moment.  Right as I'm about to post my picture, my phone dies. Reminding me to be present, that not everything has to be displayed.  Documented, yes... but displayed in the moment for validation... no.

I find an outlet to plug in my phone and I decide that I will stay here, in this cafe, drinking lattes, reading and writing until my phone is charged and my friend gets off of work and finds me and we can take my luggage back to his place.

I'm here.  I'm in Portland.








Let's Talk About Books Baby!

October

Books Bought
The Untethered Soul By: Michael A. Singer (Audible)
All The Words Are Yours: Haiku on Love By: Tyler Knott Gregson
The Girl on the Train By: Paula Hawkins
Wildflower By: Drew Barrymore

Books Read
 Purity By: Jonathan Franzen
 All The Words Are Yours: Haiku on Love By: Tyler Knott Gregson

October was a good book month for me, in more ways than one.  Not only did I read some quality stuff, but I also got to visit the most infamous and largest independent book store in the country, and I also got to go to an author event at Tattered Cover for The Girl on the Train which was fascinating and inspirational (as these events always are). 

First, the historic Powell's. This store truly is a book nerd's world wonder!  I'm not the biggest fan of used books, but it is kind of cool to be able to see things firsthand that have been elusive for years...  like McSweeney's Vol 1.  Also, who can complain about a book store that has multiple levels and rooms?  I wish I had timed my trip better because Elizabeth Gilbert was doing an appearance there just days before my arrival, and Tyler Knott Gregson was shortly after my departure.  It would have been nice to see how they put on an event compared to my home state's Tattered Cover (which rocks events).

Which leads me to Paula Hawkins.  This was a funny author event because multiple people have talked about how the main character reminded them of me, and yet, the main character is a mess! It was fun to hear the process of how she came up with this character.  She knew she wanted to have a character that drinks so much that they black out and so she worked backwards from there and was like... "What would be the saddest thing?" And then she thought how it would be pretty sad if you had been married and your husband left you because of fertility issues.  There you have it folks.  Straight out of a NY Times Bestselling Author's mouth... that scenario is just about the saddest thing.  Except for a whole other slew of atrocities that happen to the human race... like genocide, human trafficking, rape, fleeing your country and being a refugee due to the horror of war, etc.  Anyways, always fun to hear an author's process and how people received it.  Also, Tattered Cover did something I've never seen them do before they had another author (local, Eleanor Brown) interview Paula.  I thought that was interesting.

Ok... on to books!

Books bought... I keep wavering with audible.  I feel ethically I should not be buying audible versions of books from Amazon... but I like having them as options when NPR doesn't have news on, I'm caught up on podcasts, and not in the mood for music.  Am I the devil?  Maybe.  Anyways, I bought The Untethered Soul in this version so I could listen on my night drives home from yoga or while I'm at the gym.  I also joined local yogini and life coach Jacki Carr's online book club, and this was the pick after Brene Brown's newest.

I bought and finished reading Tyler Knott Gregson's latest collection of poems.  I think he has matured a lot.... they are less cliche, less desperate and more sexy.  Here's a sample...

Back against the wall
and your legs around my waist,
I kiss you again.

Early morning moans
and your longest stretching groans
I can't wait to wake.

Let's tangle them up,
twist together all our limbs.
Braid ourselves to sleep.

Legs around my waist
As I hold you in my lap
My hands on your back.

I find you in storms,
I feel you in the lightening,
I miss you in rain.

See what I mean?  Sexy.  It probably helps that this is a guy writing in the mountains of Montana on a vintage typewriter.  Dreamy.

Ok... if you are a fan of the 90's it's pretty much mandatory that you love Drew Barrymore, so of course I had to pick up her new autobiography.

Now... let's once again discuss Jonathan Franzen.

Purity took me almost a month to read.  But not because it wasn't good. As with everything I've read by Jonathan Franzen, his story lines & his characters draw you in, and yet you know that it is a book that when you sit down to read it, you want to have time. You want to be sucked in to that world.  This one was so unlike his other two I've read in the sense that I didn't feel like he was doing some big analysis of the current political events and life in the suburbs... it felt a lot less like an assigned book for school (which I love) and more just him trying a new style.  I still liked it.  As with most his books all of the characters are not unlikable, but you still find one or two to root for.

Anyways, that's all I got through this month. I don't think I'm going to make my book goal for this year (52).  I'm currently sitting at 38, that's ok.  Quality over Quantity, baby!

Friday, October 23, 2015

Los Angeles

California Love


It's been awhile since I went anywhere aside from Utah, so this trip was just what I needed.  I've already been to LA a few times, but never as an adult.  Other than hanging with my friend Bianca who I was staying with I really didn't have much on my agenda.  One thing I am finally learning and accepting about myself as I get older is I'm just not that into crowds.  

The morning started early, but I wasn't dreading the whole airport/flight experience because I was armed with the latest Jonathan Franzen novel.  I do love the way just being at the airport reminds you how there is an adventure about to be had.  Sometimes, I think I've been so scared of traveling because it reminds me of another time of my life, also the last place I ever saw my husband was in an airport... so maybe there's some underlining thing with that.  But I made note of that observation and then just remembered that not everything in my life has to come back to that.  This is a new trip, and I'm a totally different person.

Everyone always talks about the laid back west coast vibe and after my brief little trip I can't tell if people are spot on about this or completely off base.  I sat in an Avis car rental place waiting for my friend to show up for almost 2 hours, and when she got there and we hugged, I could feel an energy running through her... it felt frazzled.  She immediately starts apologizing for the LA traffic, but it was fine... I was on vacation, and I had my book! This definitely was a theme that ran through the whole weekend.  Waiting to find a spot at the parking lot to the grocery store, waiting to get a table in the breakfast diner, waiting in traffic on the way home from the beach.  With all of the waiting that people in LA have to do, I can't tell if they are the most zen people because they haven't went off the deep end with how much time of their lives is just wasted waiting or if really they are all angry on the inside because the traffic always sucks, etc.  I personally was amazed by this lifestyle. It really didn't stress me out and I don't know if that's because I've been doing yoga, or if it's because I take anti-anxiety medication, or if it was simply because this wasn't permanent for me.... it was a vacation.

Onto the reasons why people can put up with all this waiting, because on the flip side of the equation... there are beaches.  And sunsets.

    

We had a great day where we drove along the Pacific Coast Highway out to a surf n' turf restaurant called Neptune's Net.  This place was insane, so many people waiting to grab a spot!  It was well worth the wait though.  And after that we drove to a beach that wasn't secluded, but kind of felt like it was.  And maybe that's why people pay so much to live in California... because you can stand at the foot of the ocean with one of your best friends and feel like you have all the space in the world.  

I strongly believe that as cliche as it sounds, the ocean is the best therapy.  All you have to do is sit in the traffic to get there, pay the steep price to park there (thanks B!), find the perfect spot and then breathe it all in.    What is it about the ocean that gets us going?  Is it just because I'm a water sign?  Is it because we are made of water?  Why is it that we can visit a place we've been maybe a handful of times if ever and feel so at home in ourselves, in the world, in our place?  With each tide that rushes in and out over my feet I felt reborn.  Reinvigorated. Cleansed. Pure.  Why?  

I know many of us get these feelings in the mountains too.

Anyways, with any good beach and after a late lunch you are contractually obligated to sit and watch the sunset.

Then after the sun sets past the horizon line, we all scurry to our cars and sit on the I-10 for hours to drive the short distance home.  But unlike the drive to the beach, now we have been restored.  And we sing.


I loved staying with my friend.  Again, I'm stating the obvious when I say that you learn a whole other side of your friends when you stay with them and are together day in and day out. 

I loved the way when we'd leave the beach after sunset Bianca would talk about the fog rolling in and the way it messes with the windshield.  I loved that her playlists are still filled to the brim with songs from when we were younger.  I love that when she steps out of her apartment complex I can picture the restaurants within walking distance, the little courtyard where we sat and theorized and speculated about Game of Thrones.  I love that she watches a reality TV show about the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders.  I love that her baristas know her high maintenance drink order and greet her with warm welcomes each morning.  I love that when work is stressing her out she turns to God.

For my last night there we went to the Santa Monica Pier and watched the sunset.  A moment came when there was such a big wave that I noticed people oohing and ahhing like my mom does for big fireworks. Then I noticed how many people around me were all speaking different languages, and as corny as it is I loved how we might all come from different places but at the end of the day we all love a good sunset.  Sitting on the pier that night I felt so connected... The couples kissing, the girl with the goosebumps pulling her shawl over her shoulders, my friend hosting me and showing me her beautiful life... these are the things that I will always remember about my trip to California.


Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Let's Talk About Books Baby!

September


Books Bought:
Purity By: JonathanFranzen
Rising Strong By: Brene Brown (audible)
Fates & Furies By: Lauren Groff
It's Your World: Get Informed, Get Inspired & Get Going! By: Chelsea Clinton
Big Magic By: Elizabeth Gilbert (audible)
Books Read:
Killing Monica By: Candace Bushnell
Rising Strong By: Brene Brown (audible)
Big Magic By: Elizabeth Gilbert (audible)

This month, my Candace Bushnell trashy novel aside was all about inspiration!  But first, let's take out the trash before we get to the good stuff.  

Lordy, I need to stop reading Candace Bushnell.  I always look at her books the same way I do Emily Giffin, it's like taking a trip to the beach or the candy store.  Indulgent.  But, this book is like a new low, I honestly was embarrassed that I read it and found myself taking off the jacket only to put it back on because the book was a bright pink!  Everything about it screamed, "I'm a bimbo and I don't have a brain!"

Ugh. Gross.

Now... Brene and Ms. Gilbert!  Good, good stuff.  I liked listening to the audible versions of both of these books.  They were both read by the author and unabridged so I don't feel like I missed anything.  Also, it just felt like listening to a warm, gooey podcast for days on end.  Every trip in my car was delightful!  I felt like I was doing something good for myself just by tuning in.  Anyways, do it!  There is nothing better than going to yoga and the gym after work and then taking a peaceful ride home listening to these wonderful ladies!  Definitely a highlight of my September!