WOMEN AGES 50+ FOR JULY 2018
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Machka: What I do to make my life simpler: Cut my hair. I can't imagine you doing it, with your hip-length hair, but mine's crazy curly, requires tons of product to not look like dandelion fuzz. So, I cut it short again. A little gel & frizz-ease, and 10 seconds of blow dryer to get it out of my face, and I'm done. It's freed up time I need, and I love my hair short.
Other than that, I've also decided not to apply for CEO of the organization I work for, although I'd have plenty of support if I tried it. Discussed at length the issues I see with the organization with my sister this weekend, and formulated a plan for how I can make things better from the position I'm working in now. I can influence it, but not change it, and I've decided I'm OK with that.
You're already "chunking" tasks, as your "one thing" approach shows. That's been quite helpful in a complicated life, as is setting interim goals. Instead of driving toward an end goal that seems so far away, it's setting a goal that will move me toward it. That way I get the feeling of forward movement, even if it's at a slower speed than I'm inclined to want to go.
I've also learned that good enough is good enough. It's taken me 58 years.
Lisa in AR
Edit -I also have an Excel spreadsheet in a long, running table with one line for each day. Columns are phone calls/meetings, grant/project deadlines, and travel. Makes it easy to see what's coming up and let me get those out of hover mode in my mind. I check it daily.1 -
Saturday -- not much exercise. We were resting up to go to the Tasmania Symphony Orchestra in the evening. Our first real "outing" since the accident.
Sunday -- 900 metre walk when the rain stopped.
Then, I did ...
Distance -- 19.65km
Elevation -- 40m
Moving Time: 43:00
Elapsed Time: 50:40
........................ Avg ............. Max
Speed ............. 27.4km/h ....... 41.4km/h
Heart Rate ...... 145bpm ......... 172bpm
Cadence ......... 83 ................. 121
Power ............ 101W ............ 239W
And my husband did ...
Distance: 9.57km
Elevation: 33m
Moving Time: 21:11
Elapsed Time: 21:11
................. Avg .............. Max
Speed ..... 27.1km/h ........ 42.5km/h
Cadence .. 65 .................. 73
Power ..... 113W ............. 157W
As with all flat routes on Zwift (we did the London Flat Route), I think our speeds and distances are a bit overblown.
Machka in Oz4 -
Hi all!
I'm home!!!! Not too bad a journey through the very much needed rain. Lots of spray, but because it's a Sunday there weren't so many lorries.
I'm going to take a short nap now as I have bags on my bags under the eyes and then I will get on the recumbent bike and watch last night's finale of the thriller series. Rowing afterwards I hope.
I'm just going to do egg and bacon tonight with a tomato. No inspiration at all.
4pm or after someone is coming in a van to take away the huge cupboard. Fingers crossed it happens. I did specify two strong people. DH is forbidden to help.
I just adore decluttering. Apart from my writings and photos and very sentimental mementos, I am good at it. Clothes, shoes, stuff I don't find hard at all. Now I have got rid of my cupboard, DH has promised to get rid of his grandmother’s glass fronted cabinet. Hideous! When exchange goes through I will get to work. If anyone wants it. Old fashioned, dark furniture you can't give away these days. Other than that one sofa has to go. I do need to rationalise my china collection, which is mostly inherited. The Welsh dresser it's in now is going to go in the front guest bedroom, when we've moved a radiator which is occupying a whole wall . Then recarpet. So it will have to stay in the garage for now. I don't suppose guests will want to stare at my grandmother’s old crockery! Other stuff in there is from my old bottom drawer and I never use it. Time to move it on.
Nap time now.
Love Heather UK xxxxxxx3 -
Lisa I had to laugh at your Excel spreadsheet....I only know your from here, but it sounds like what I would expect from you! LOL! I have a friend that actually did an excel spreadsheet for her vacation. Times for all activities, what they were ordering at what restaurants, how much money they would be spending, etc....I call that a little extreme! I can see the importance of it to help organize tasks and commitments, just not on vacation. I really plan little while on vacation in TN. Pretty much, wake up, spend time on cabin deck with coffee and whatever work I need to get done, then we decide what we want to do that day. Even my DH manages some days of mainly being at the cabin.
When I grow up I am going to be organized!
Calendars and planners- I suck at them. My youngest daughter and family made us a dry erase board calendar for our bedroom so that my DH could see what was coming up. I forget to change it. Trying to get better at it. I print large so he can see it. I have Alexa, but as I am on my cell wireless for the time being, I don't make very good use of her. More for my shopping list. I do use my phone calendar, when I remember to check it! I even have a great planner book.....guess I need to get more goal oriented and less fly by the seat of my pants.
Welcome home, HeatherUK! I hope they show up for the chest! My daughter and SIL are finally getting their act together. Their current home is smaller than any of the military rentals they stayed in. All their furniture was big. They put it up for sale and purchased a new couch and love seat along with a dining room table that fits the space better. The only problem has been people who say they want it, but then don't follow through. When I was younger I would have gladly bought a sectional sofa for $200! Yes, it is used, but not broken down. So sad that people don't follow through. These two have been struggling financially since he got out of the Navy. Stupid decisions didn't help. I feel they are finally growing up!
Better get ready. DH will be saying time to leave in a few and I am still in pj's!
Kylia0 -
PS- same friend with excel sheet for vacation, stayed with us in a cabin. We had been there 3 days before their arrival....she reorganized the cabinets when she got there.....she has the perfect job at a bank for her OCD. I just shake my head, wait til they leave and put it back the way it works for me.
I am sure that my house drives her crazy most days. hehe
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Oh - my daughter taught me one thing on the list-making on dry erase boards. She makes the list, takes a picture of it with her phone, and then has all the information she needs, whether it's a grocery list, addresses, whatever. Write it once, keep it until it's no longer needed. We're still doing that. I've developed the habit of taking a picture of the board with my phone whenever I leave the house, and erasing the board when I come back. Means I never forget my grocery list, either, as I always have my phone with me.3
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LisaInNCNow wrote: »Oh - my daughter taught me one thing on the list-making on dry erase boards. She makes the list, takes a picture of it with her phone, and then has all the information she needs, whether it's a grocery list, addresses, whatever. Write it once, keep it until it's no longer needed. We're still doing that. I've developed the habit of taking a picture of the board with my phone whenever I leave the house, and erasing the board when I come back. Means I never forget my grocery list, either, as I always have my phone with me.
The other students in my classes take pictures of everything! None of them are Australian, so part of it is that many of them have to take that information to be translated, but it can be a good idea and I've started doing that too.
I was definitely doing that when my husband was in the Rehab hospital ... take a picture of his schedule. Now I put it into an online planner.
Machka in Oz
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Machka - I know you have a lot on your plate right now - I remember the year I was working, taking the Master Gardener training (many volunteer hours!) and my DH recovering from his broken back and leg wound. Somehow I got it all done - perhaps I made it my therapy and yes, I relied on lists. Your perimenopause with the spotting and extra periods sounds like mine was. I went a whole year w/o a period then spotted and cramped. I was devastated. My OB/GYN found an ovarian cyst so I got a D&C, laparoscopic biopsy and appendectomy all in one fell swoop. That finally put me into meno permanently. Was I ever glad, I never enjoyed that time of the month part of being a girl!
Lisa - loved your blog and photos of your helpers getting a lot done. Great job on the walls and the ceiling beams will be nifty. Neat that it's working out with your son being able to help and stay there too. You would have made a FAB CEO I think. So organized and enthusiastic! Maybe next year once your house is done?
Kelly - so tickled for you getting those grants. Yes, your DH needs to spend the time with his folks, you have enough on your plate. You would also make a great CEO! I think you already are!! Is your DH's medication working OK for him? My DH no longer shows the RA inflammation in his blood tests so I guess he's in full remission, but the darn disease attacks more than the joints and some damage has been done - his fatigue is sometimes overwhelming.
Kylia - I've been meaning to comment on your cute house! So well organized! I know what you mean about dusting shelf sitters, lol. I did manage to declutter the mantel this spring and put things into the thriftstore box. DH wondered what I did with them and I said stuck them in the closet, lol. I'm sure he's forgotten what was even up there.
Okie - yes, you are a superb organizer! My potting shed looked like that once, lol. Thanks to you I've put cleaning it out back on the list for something to do this fall.
Heather - you mentioned your grandmother's old crockery. I have a few old pitchers & wash basins and a clock that belonged to my great-grandparents. I remember how I fiercely wanted them and managed to grab them before my siblings got them. Now, I puzzle over who will eventually get them when the time comes.
Barbie - thinking of you this morning and hoping what the ER doc gave you is doing the trick. If I do my exercises every day that seems to help but I'm good at slacking off and paying the price later. I found an interesting book called "Back in Control" by Dr. David Hanscom who is a well known Seattle back surgeon and discovered a method of healing back pain without surgery. I fall "back" ()on his tips from time to time. He has a website backincontrol.com
I have finished watching all episodes of the Real Skinny on Fat and will rewatch a few today. What was so interesting about this series is that it included a lot about sleep, circadian rhythm, ways to spike ketones other than just low carbing. As I watched these interviews, I thought what a neat college course they would make.
Wendy - your Wendy fast sounds great and I am tickled you have found what works for you. I really liked "How Not to Die" - even though Dr. Greger is a vegan, he is not preachy or in your face and just says to start incorporating more healthy foods and you'll eventually want less animal products. Good advice.
Mary - after understanding more about the healing power of Ketones, I am excited for you and your upcoming fast. What sparked you to engage in fasting to help mitigate the effects of your Lyme disease? How is your daughter by the way?
OK, time for me to get going. Have a wonderful day ladies... August is just around the corner!
Lanette
Sunny and HOT SW WA State
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Making my life easier! Last night I started an experiment with my husband. I am usually the one that does everything around the house and everything to make life easier for my husband. So I decided to just ask my husband very nicely to do things that I usually do for us. For instance I usually make the apple cider vinegar for us. Last night We were out sitting by the campfire and I nicely asked him if he could please make me the apple cider vinegar. He looked at me and said sure and asked how and away he went. I continued this morning by asking if he would please take the dog out which he gladly did and he even fed and watered him! Now we're sitting here at the baseball game and he even carted my garbage away...it's amazing how willing he is to help...I have laundry to do this afternoon...
Mary from Minnesota \ Arizona6 -
Tiny steps! Love ‘em. Tidied up the kitchen and mowed the back yard. Relaxing on the back porch cause it is a gorgeous day-soon I will go to the gym!4
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Barbie: I am so sorry that you are hurting. I hope the doctors are able to help. I'm looking forward to hearing how you are dong.
I've been watching the series on burning fat. I have many episodes left to see, and I'm learning more about how our bodies work. Lanette, THANK YOU!
Katla in Beautiful NW Oregon
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The "gentleman's press " is gone!!!!!
They turned up in a small van plus a car. A big woman and a thin man. What a lot of heaving and sweating and crashing and banging. Oooooffff! But they got it all in the vehicles, in the pouring rain. Coming downstairs she was on the bottom. I thought she was going to tip over. She said it was bigger than she thought. I did give all the measurements!
I got an email a few minutes ago, thanking me. She said she loves it!
I am happy it went to the right people.
Re organising. I am retired, so life is less hectic in general, but I keep a small diary in my handbag (purse) and occasionally synchronise it with DH. I have to put all his cricket days in there and he has to put my girly lunches etc.
Generally I think I am an organised person. I only have to make lists etc very occasionally. I can hold logistics in my head quite easily. If I find they are preoccupying me then I write them down.
When we have exchanged I will download a "to do" list from the Internet. There are loads. It is a hugely busy time. Thank goodness our decluttering is well under way. Usually "completion" is around two weeks to a month from exchange.
My DSIL, who we were visiting this week, is a lovely woman, but she has huge difficulty in sequencing and logistics. I have heard it is a form of dispraxia. I have to keep well away when she is trying to sort something, like lunch, because it drives me insane. A simple procedure, like looking up a purchase on Amazon, is really hard for her. Booking a holiday is fraught with problems. When I heard her condition described on the radio it all made sense. Simple choices are incredibly complicated and she is a very slow reader who can't summarise at a glance like I can.
She was a sister in a IC ward, so very capable, but I find it hard to watch the way she struggles with simple tasks. She qualified as a counsellor, but failed the final certificated exams as she can't marshall her thoughts in any order, or make a summary.
She is such a lovely and capable woman. Do any of you recognise this syndrome?
Much love, Heather UK xxxxxxx3 -
Heather I have dyspraxia.
Each dyspraxic person has different abilities and weaknesses as dyspraxia often comes with a variety of comorbidities. It sounds like your SIL primarily has dyspraxia presenting in impairment of cognitive or processing abilities.
My disorder presents itself in very poor fine motor control (for instance sewing on a button takes me more than an hour and usually has a tangled mess of thread in the underside) and moderately bad gross motor control (I bump into things a lot and was hopeless at sports). My condition is complicated because I also have a proprioception disorder (chicken and egg problem - which came first?) and lack three dimensional vision (depth perception) due to my blind right eye.
The practical effect day to day on my life is that even simple physical things like buttoning my shirt, tying my shoes or ladling soup from a pot to a bowl are difficult and I often fail (button not done correctly or spill liquids from the ladle etc.). Collectively these were the reasons I gave up trying to bike ride last year - we ultimately determined it was unsafe for me to ride.
My EEG in the 1970’s suggested I should have cognitive impairment as well, but either that diagnosis was incorrect (likely due to the newness of EEG technology at the time) or it is so minimal as to not be noticeable.
Rye
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fanncy0626 wrote: »Making my life easier! Last night I started an experiment with my husband. I am usually the one that does everything around the house and everything to make life easier for my husband. So I decided to just ask my husband very nicely to do things that I usually do for us. For instance I usually make the apple cider vinegar for us. Last night We were out sitting by the campfire and I nicely asked him if he could please make me the apple cider vinegar. He looked at me and said sure and asked how and away he went. I continued this morning by asking if he would please take the dog out which he gladly did and he even fed and watered him! Now we're sitting here at the baseball game and he even carted my garbage away...it's amazing how willing he is to help...I have laundry to do this afternoon...
Mary from Minnesota \ Arizona
Love how you asked for help. I am still working on thanking the person no matter how the job is done.
To keep simplify my life learning to saying NO. Also saying with no explanation or a simple one like now is not a good time. I rarely feel guilty for saying no anymore. I figure it is my time to spend and I need to use it wisely this is especially when I dealing with a personal crisis. I also respect when others say no for the same reason and try not to change their minds.
I too am a list maker which helps me.
I also do my five rule. Be happy to put 5 things away. Wash 5 dishes. Take five minutes to start a task. Often this is all I need to get going on something on my list. If I do not finish I am at least closer to being done the next time I have a chance to work on it.Margaret
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afternoon ladies~
I took a nap and took Alfie for a walk and had a BLT, and am going through paperwork right now..
I did re-pot my hibiscus into a bigger pot.. so Hopefully it will be ok... unbelievebly I have been able to keep the plants we had at my dads funeral alive...I was not born with a green thumb..3 -
Thanks so much for the nice comments on my progress pictures.
Dana, a good book for someone new to a ketogenic diet is “Keto Living Day by Day” by Kristie H. Sullivan, PhD. A good documentary is “The Magic Pill”.
Kelly, would love to see you again in October.
Here is my sassy and bossy 2 1/2 yo granddaughter. When we play hide and seek, she will tell me where to hide.
Cathy, Arlington, TX7 -
Cathy loved the picture of your granddaughter!
I had a fun day yesterday.
First I went to a place called Little Home Pioneer Village. A farmer south of Hastings Minnesota decide to make his own museum by buying up buildings to preserve them . They only open it to the public one weekend a year. The end of July. It has become a living history museum. I love history. It is fascinating what is in their collection. They also created one of the top ten gardens I have seen.
Here are pictures from the garden:
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