Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Sprouting!

My tree is sprouting! Remember I mentioned that I got a bonzai tree at Red Butte Gardens...well after just 10 days, it's growing its first little sprout! See it? It's that green dot :)

Maybe this is what it's like when your baby grows a tooth... haha :)

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Some things that have happened during the last few weeks:
  • Went on a picnic with my mom and little brother Matt at Red Butte Garden. Finally made use of the awesome weather we WERE having. I hate myself for forgetting to bring the camera :( Made a pact to go again in the REAL spring.
  • Got a mini bonzai tree to plant in a tiny pot for my kitchen :) I hear bonzai trees need much less attention than regular plants...maybe it'll have a chance at survival.
  • Had a craving for VEGETABLES and got a billion pounds at the grocery store. I spent all our grocery money for the week on vegetables...hm...
  • Went to Trevor's brother Brandon's play "Don't Drink the Water" in which he plays the Russian villain. Nice to Brandon acting himself :) Baha! just kidding.
  • My brain changed its thinking and suddenly got really into my book. I've been reading like 3 times as much. Almost done with book 2.
  • I got brave and emailed a link to my blog about my bathroom mirror decorations to the chick who inspired me--she liked it! And put a link of it in her more famous blog--that lots of people see. Eek! Neat that she liked it though.
  • Trevor beat Fable II so now I have my husband back--now instead of wasting time with Fable, he can waste time watching Stargate with me.
  • Which leads me to: Watched a butt-load of Stargate and I'm more hooked than ever. Bah! WHY?!
  • Resisted urges to go to a movie practically every night last week--Now I KNOW for sure I'll get to go to a really good one soon.
  • Trevor discovered frozen yogurt. sigh. I'll never escape frozen dairy products now.
  • Exercised TWICE last week! Yeah, I know... glass half empty, glass half full. Don't rain on my parade.
  • Went to Heidi's (Trevor's mom) ward pot luck dinner/talent show and "treated" the minions (sp? anyone) with my "music".
  • Avoided cleaning the kitchen as much as possible. Ugh. Momentary satisfaction.
  • Trevor's brother Travis and his wife Robyn got a tent--and they bragged all about it--and now I want to go camping! I want to sleep in a bag and be crammed with 5 people in a 2-man tent, and eat camp food, and make a fire. That means I need to acquire a tent, sleeping bag, 3 other people, camp food and supplies. I can make fire already.
  • I've been getting better at getting to work at 8:00 AM. Actually, I went from getting to work at 8:30 to getting to work at 8:10. Almost there.
  • Committed to doing some Easter music thing at church.
  • Purchased "The Business of Being Born" and want to watch it with Robyn and Travis. Can't wait to see another man's reaction :)
  • Dinner at Amber's (Brandon's girlfriend) where Trevor ACTUALLY played games.
  • Dinner at Travis and Robyn's where we made hobo dinners. Yum.

Anywho. I have absolutely no pictures for any of that except the last. Maybe you'll get to see them eventually.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Growin' Up

Holy Hannah! Look at how big she's getting! Nate and Sarah don't send me pictures often enough, and now she's all big. It's only been a month since the family breakfast, and Bella's changed so much! She looks so much liker he mom too :)

Monday, March 16, 2009

More Cyanide and Happiness

I know this is a lot, but I really LOVE these comics :) They have made my day much better.

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

For Cheering Myself Up: Candyland

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Credit?

Holy mama!

I read this article this morning, and it just makes me feel like we have NO chance. Ugh. I've heard a lot about problems with credit card companies lately, but this just really sinks the boat. That, combined with our bank going under and switching to Chase and changing up a bunch of stuff, and totally getting screwed when we bought cars, just makes me want to never go to another financial institution, EVER.

How to Blow Your Credit Limit -- Without Spending

by Kelli B. GrantThursday, March 12, 2009

If you haven't had the credit limit cut on your credit card recently, count yourself lucky. Risk-averse card issuers are getting slash happy. And while many cardholders gripe that such cuts slice razor-close to their balance amounts, for an unfortunate few the cuts go far deeper: below what they currently owe.

Under different circumstances, David Chaplin-Loebell wouldn't have minded that American Express cut his unlimited credit line to just $5,000. Except that when AmEx reduced his line in October, he had an outstanding balance of $10,000. "I found out by having a business purchase declined," he says. Repeated calls to AmEx failed to yield an answer about why the cut was made. Chaplin-Loebell, who lives in Philadelphia, is now paying the balance under his regular card terms, and presumes the line will free up for new purchases once he's below the limit. "For now, they've essentially frozen the account," he says, leaving him to juggle business expenses on his personal cards. American Express did not respond to requests for comment.

Nasty as it may be, the practice of cutting credit lines below the balance is legal -- at least, for now, says Chi Chi Wu, a staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center, a consumer advocacy group. Federal Reserve rules requiring lenders to give cardholders 45 days notice before reducing a credit line to the point that it would trigger penalties won't go into effect until July 2010. "[Until] then, there are no federal protections," says Wu.

Congress is also hoping to rein in unscrupulous credit-card practices. In February, Sen. Chris Dodd (D., Conn.), chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, reintroduced the Credit CARD Act, which among other things, offers cardholder protections like the ability to pay under the existing terms if an account is closed and requiring issuers to lower penalty rates within six months once a cardholder gets back on track with payments. Earlier this month, the House Committee on Financial Services chairman Barney Frank, announced a series of four hearings that will include discussions about credit card reform.
SmartMoney.com contacted both committees to see if they were aware of issuers' practice of cutting credit lines below balances, and if they planned to address it in upcoming hearings. Neither responded to requests for comment.

The motivation among issuers to make such deep cuts that they plunge below a cardholder's balance amount isn't very clear. Usually, issuers cut credit lines to reduce outstanding liabilities -- they sometimes may even chase the balance on riskier accounts with further limit cuts as cardholders pay down debts, explains Bill Carcache, an analyst with investment bank Fox-Pitt Kelton. But cutting below the balance doesn't reduce an issuer's liability: The cardholder still owes the outstanding debt.

One possibility is that this is yet another attempt by card issuers to get consumers to close their accounts (while bringing in a little fee income in the short term), says Dennis Moroney, research director and senior analyst for consulting firm Tower Group. "I can't rationalize in my mind what other motivation there would be," he says.

Paul Pensabene of Saratoga Springs, N.Y., received a statement from HSBC on Dec. 8 that said he had a $359.99 balance and remaining available credit of $8,640. But when he went online to pay the bill several days later, his online account showed that same balance put him over his newly-reduced credit line of $300. And that didn't include the $35 over-limit fee. Pensabene grappled with customer service until they agreed to remove the fee, and then paid the balance in full. "All I could think was, 'Good lord, what if this is happening to someone that couldn't pay their balance off in one shot?'" he says. "They'd end up in default with these fees piling up."
HSBC declined to comment on individual cardholder accounts. Spokeswoman Cindy Savio says the issuer has tightened its credit standards based on the economy. "As we have previously stated, in an effort to reduce credit risk and refine strategies for our card business, we have tightened credit standards, reduced or canceled higher risk credit lines, and closed a number of inactive accounts," she says.

While the fees, frozen accounts and default interest rates resulting from credit-line cuts can sting your finances, they can do some serious long-term damage to your credit score. Your credit utilization ratio -- the total amount of debt you owe in relation to the amount of credit available to you -- accounts for roughly 30% of your score. A credit line cut has the potential to decrease your score by 50 points or more if you don't have much other available credit, says Craig Watts, spokesman for FICO, the company that calculates and issues the credit score that most lenders use.

Even cuts that are close to the balance have the potential to devastate if they're not caught quickly. Luckily for Carol Gressett of Decatur, Miss., she noticed the reduction in her Discover-branded Sam's Club card limit just days after it happened. The limit was cut to within $100 of her $3,000 balance. The official letter notifying her of the reduction arrived three weeks later. "We could easily have gone over if I hadn't been paying attention," she says.
(A Discover spokesperson says GE Money issues the cards, and so is responsible for managing credit lines. GE Money did not respond to requests for comment.)

Copyrighted, SmartMoney.com. All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Mini Shopping Spree

My day started off with driving Trevor to work at 8:15 AM. Yippee, waking up early on my day off :[

But then after I went home and lazed about for a couple hours, I decided I needed to make some good use of my time and get some new shoes. I was MOSTLY prompted by this:



My brown shoes that I got at the DI for a REALLY great steal are finally giving out. So I found these:

And of course I had to get these too:
And then I went to the mall after lunch with Trevor, and I found a few more awesome things at Hot Topic:

Scarf (we'll see if I can actually pull it off)

Close-up of the scarf. I like the pattern.

Earrings and necklace. I've been wanting some like this for a while.


Haha, I saw these when I was with my mom a few weeks ago. The tiny skulls make me laugh :) I'll find the most joy out of wearing them on days I'm supposed to be dressing up at work, knowing that my boss can't see that they're actually skulls. Bwahaha.

I got this necklace to match (since they were having a buy one get one half off sale). I'm totally digging all the pieces except for the brass nuckles... not QUITE sure if that fits me, but oh well. I'll pretend like I don't know it's there and no one else will notice.
I also got two new shirts! I didn't take pictures of them though because shirts look weird when you take pictures of them just lying there.
When Trevor got home from work I gave him the (token) pack of socks I bought for him and he decided he needed something new too, so we went back to Tar-jay and I picked out a new jacket for him. It's something a little out of his usual, but I think it looks AWESOME! Maybe I'll put up some pictures of that later too. We'll see.
I love getting new stuff. I don't love so much seeing all our money go away...oh, but it's mostly worth it.

Bathroom

Yay, I finally have something REAL to blo0g about (haha, I accidentally typed the zero key in blog. Looks funny, so I'll leave it.)

I was going to start adding some decorations to my kitchen with the vinyl--maybe a border with some circles or squares or something. But I decided to practice on my bathroom since it's less visible to the public (and clean, at the moment; where as the kitchen is not). I went for like, a circles and squares outlines deal. Just look at the pictures; it's easier than explaining.










I also wanted to show you the new yellow additions. I got some bath mats and towels that are yellow. I thought they'd make me happy when I'm up at the crack of dawn getting ready for work. I went on sort of a shopping spree today, and spent WAY more than I was planning. But that's another blog post...
(oh, uh, don't look at the reflection in the mirrors at my bedroom behind the camera... I obviously only cleaned the area I was working in...)

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Forgot one thing in purse:
  • Cell phone (but I took it out to take the picture)

A Head With a Heart

KEVIN CULLEN

By Kevin Cullen, Globe Columnist March 12, 2009

It was the kind of meeting that is taking place in restaurant kitchens, small offices, retail storerooms, and large auditoriums all over this city, all over this state, all over this country.
Paul Levy, the guy who runs Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, was standing in Sherman Auditorium the other day, before some of the very people to whom he might soon be sending pink slips.

In the days before the meeting, Levy had been walking around the hospital, noticing little things.
He stood at the nurses' stations, watching the transporters, the people who push the patients around in wheelchairs. He saw them talk to the patients, put them at ease, make them laugh. He saw that the people who push the wheelchairs were practicing medicine.

He noticed the same when he poked his head into the rooms and watched as the people who deliver the food chatted up the patients and their families.

He watched the people who polish the corridors, who strip the sheets, who empty the trash cans, and he realized that a lot of them are immigrants, many of them had second jobs, most of them were just scraping by.

And so Paul Levy had all this bouncing around his brain the other day when he stood in Sherman Auditorium.

He looked out into a sea of people and recognized faces: technicians, secretaries, administrators, therapists, nurses, the people who are the heart and soul of any hospital. People who knew that Beth Israel had hired about a quarter of its 8,000 staff over the last six years and that the chances that they could all keep their jobs and benefits in an economy in freefall ranged between slim and none.

"I want to run an idea by you that I think is important, and I'd like to get your reaction to it," Levy began. "I'd like to do what we can to protect the lower-wage earners - the transporters, the housekeepers, the food service people. A lot of these people work really hard, and I don't want to put an additional burden on them.

"Now, if we protect these workers, it means the rest of us will have to make a bigger sacrifice," he continued. "It means that others will have to give up more of their salary or benefits."
He had barely gotten the words out of his mouth when Sherman Auditorium erupted in applause. Thunderous, heartfelt, sustained applause.

Paul Levy stood there and felt the sheer power of it all rush over him, like a wave. His eyes welled and his throat tightened so much that he didn't think he could go on.

When the applause subsided, he did go on, telling the workers at Beth Israel, the people who make a hospital go, that he wanted their ideas.

The lump had barely left his throat when Paul Levy started getting e-mails.

The consensus was that the workers don't want anyone to get laid off and are willing to give up pay and benefits to make sure no one does. A nurse said her floor voted unanimously to forgo a 3 percent raise. A guy in finance who got laid off from his last job at a hospital in Rhode Island suggested working one less day a week. Another nurse said she was willing to give up some vacation and sick time. A respiratory therapist suggested eliminating bonuses.

"I'm getting about a hundred messages per hour," Levy said yesterday, shaking his head.
Paul Levy is onto something. People are worried about the next paycheck, because they're only a few paychecks away from not being able to pay the mortgage or the rent.

But a lot of them realize that everybody's in the same boat and that their boat doesn't rise because someone else's sinks.

Paul Levy is trying something revolutionary, radical, maybe even impossible: He is trying to convince the people who work for him that the E in CEO can sometimes stand for empathy.

Kevin Cullen is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at cullen@globe.com.

Wasting an hour

I sure wish I had something to write about.


I hate it when you have those days where you try and focus your brain on something and it JUST WON'T focus on the thing you tell it to. Like, the other day when I was folding laundry (hm, wonder why I was doing that...), after a while I just couldn't any more. I would pick a shirt up, look at it, and seriously, not know where to begin folding. That's how I feel at work today. I have this list of things right in front of me, and I just look at it and don't know what to do.


That pen in the picture is my favorite pen at work, and it's totally almost gone. I should get some more, but we DO have like a hundred other kinds and it would feel sort of wasteful. It'd be hard to justify to someone other than myself.


So, not having the brain-power to do something on my list of things to do, I wanted to write something awesome in my blog... hm.


Let's play the purse game. Here's what's in my bag (since I need to clean it out):
  • Wallet/checkbook thingy (what are those called?)

  • Address book

  • Book: The Great Hunt, book two of The Wheel of Time. Currently on page304/681 (I think this is like 3 weeks overdue at the library...)

  • Keys

  • Trident gum. Orginal flavor. I got this because I'm tired of having bad breath after lunch at work. I also got some more toothpaste, although, that is not in my bag.

  • Mini-brush. For brushing my hair when it's tangly.

  • Ear phones for my cellphone (tangled up in the string from my undershirt that came off last weekend while I was in Joann's looking for vinyl).

  • Budget

  • Mascara; my new one. I like it. Except that it leaves more black stuff under my eyes when I try to wash it off than my last one.

  • Green eye shadow. MMM.

  • Brown shades of eye shadow.

  • Chap Stick skin protectant/suncsreen SPF 15 MOISTURIZER

  • Burt's Bees replenishing lip balm with pomegranate oil

  • Eye shadow putter on-er brush

  • Mechanical pencil

  • Green uni-ball pen (second favorite pen)

  • Car insurance card and etc from the accident 2/14

  • Paperwork from America First Credit Union about refinancing our car (no go) from last weekend.

  • List of OB/GYNs who accept my insurance and who are accepting new patients. You know what is just the BEST? The earliest appointment isn't until May 22nd.

  • Grocery list

  • Application for Smith's Fresh Values Card (that I don't intend to complete, just use for when I have to go there)

  • Phoenix Alliance (anti smoking) pin

  • Handful of receipts.

So intriguing.

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Walk around my complex

I took a walk outside today to put that decal on my car, and it was such an amazing day I wanted to capture it. I've been wanting to take pictures of some of the things around anyways. I was kind of surprised at what I found when I went looking.

I love how some of them are all picked at or half rotten.




The maintenance crew at our complex cut the branches off of some of the trees around our building. I was sad when I saw how much they'd cut off--and then they just left it on the ground. It's been a few weeks now.


Here's the pine tree right outside our stairwell. I love that we have a little walkway and trees. It's beautiful all year.


I was just looking at the rail on our landing. Our apartment complex is a little bleak right now, and rusted metal and chipped paint doensn't exactly help.

Another tree.


Here's the sidewalk I walk on every day when I park my car.

I think it's amazing that there can still be leaves blowing around 3 months after winter started. Dried leaves are way pretty.

Apparently we don't have "SEWERS" at my complex; we only have "EWERS."

Bunch of brown and green. Weird to see the contrast.

There was a completely bare bush that made me feel kind of sad. It has been trimmed and the little branches just look so beat up.

I also found hot sauce in the bush. Ugh, we have a lot of garbage floating around everywhere.

Like I said, a lot of rust. It's sort of nice, in a way.

Here's our building. It's what I see every day.

This is another one of the trees they "trimmed" (more like "cut in half"). I love the insides of trees. They look so alive.

AHNTHAC decals

Yay! I found this software called Sure Cuts Alot on some random blog and it is AMAZING. It's for the Cricut, and it allows you to cut with all your true type fonts that are on your computer. That means I don't need to go buy a cartridge everytime I want a new font!

Seriously, YA-HOO!

I spent about an hour yesterday getting the software, driving to Best Buy for the right USB cord, updating my Cricut firmware, and learning how to navigate in the software--and now I can make ANYTHING I WANT!

So obviously that means Trevor and I started with some vinyl decals for his band :) We just downloaded the fonts that we wanted to use (that he has used in the past for show posters and shirts) from http://www.1001freefonts.com/ and cut and ta-da! We have perfect decals to stick on bumpers, windows, computers, gaming systems, binders, you name it! They're going to sell each one for $1, so if anyone wants one...

The decals! I can't believe I can actually make these :)
I put one on my car.

Here's the first one I did; it was sort of a tester, but we liked it so we put it on the xbox.

If any one is interested in getting that Sure Cuts Alot Software, I went to http://www.craftedge.com/purchase/purchase.html. I also found a coupon code that will give you 10% off: 8250985. The blog I found the software info on is http://adamsacres.com/category/sure-cuts-a-lot/ and he explains a lot about the software and what you need. If anyone has a Cricut, I totally recommend getting this too! I am willing to answer any questions about setting it up if anyone has any.