8/24/07

Don't Be Such A Baby!

This morning as I was sitting on our couch suffering from extreme boredom, I decided to glance at blackboard to see if anything for my new classes this fall had been posted. A couple of my classes had actually put some stuff up and the class with the most information was my Development in Infancy class. I was browsing through, getting excited to learn all of what seemed to be very interesting stuff, when I stumbled upon an Extra Credit assignment. I must say, I laughed out loud for a couple minutes after reading through it. It's quite simple, actually, just a little odd. The assignment is to block out a four hour period and, well, act like a baby. Crawl around on your hands and knees, restrain from communicating verbally (aside from grunts and goo-goo gaa-gaas), and use only very basic motor skills. How funny! I'm sure that if I take on this assignment Tony will have a very entertaining evening to look forward to. Apparently the purpose of this assignment is to come to a realization of or to remember how it is for an infant to live in this world. It seems like it's going to be very frustrating. I just hope I don't have to eat infant food. Ick!

8/23/07

Three goals...

Tony, here.

I have to say right off the bat that this is my maiden voyage into the BlogSpot world. Sure, I've thrown down a few words here and there on Myspace.com (before BYU decided that logging into Myspace is directly correlated with a spiritual downgrade of sorts, and thus has restricted access to the website, along with a host of others...that really is another subject), but I really haven't put forth the effort to flesh out anything decent in a while. Not that I wouldn't like to--after all, I'm supposedly a fledgling writer of sorts--I might direct you to my inexhaustible list of published works...hold on...I just can't seem to remember where I placed the list...;)

Perhaps the proper time for goal-setting is New Year's when resolutions and fresh starts are on every one's mind. However, I am more disposed to self-evaluations during the long summer months, when school is scanty, work is arduous, and the only glimmer of intellectual progress that can be made is through sheer dedication to autonomous study. The resolutions made at the culmination of holiday mirth often tend toward shedding the unwanted pounds from the traditional killing (and consequential consumption) of the proverbial fatted calf--in essence, it is a striving back to a previous state--but my summer aims are more often seeking new heights in various aspects of my life. I want to achieve what I have heretofore been unable to (or never attempted to) achieve. As such, three of my goals from this summer are:

1. Do "well" on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Now I realize that "well" is about as relative a term as you can get, and that goals are merely yearnings when not accompanied by specific, quantifiable results, so I will qualify my goal slightly: I want to score at least a 700 on the verbal section of the GRE, at least a 600 on the quantitative section, and get a 5.5 or higher on the essay portion. (The highest possible scores are, respectively, 800, 800, and 6.0) In order to do this, I've taken to some serious summer studying, adding roughly 800 words to my vocabulary in about a month's time (with another 100 or so more vocab words to go), and learning all of the tricks of the test-taking trade through a book that Hollie so sagely recommended to me. I would like to take the test in December after finals.

2. Dunk a basketball on a ten-foot goal. Now this is a silly goal, intermingled amidst academic aims of much higher importance! But look at it from my perspective: Ever since I was probably ten years old I've dreamed of dunking a basketball. The prospect seemed imminent when I was 14 and 5'7" and could already touch the rim. Then, at about age 16 and 5'9", my biological clock determined that it was time to quit growing (at least vertically). Now, I've done the math: at 5'9", and a reach of about 7'4", I would have to have about a 40" vertical leap in order to smoothly dunk a basketball on a ten-foot goal. Right now I'm hovering around a 37" leap, so it's not altogether an outrageous proposition. So my reasoning behind placing this goal on an-ever-so-short list of more-worthy aspirations is two-fold: First, accomplishing it would utterly convince me that I am capable of whatever I set my mind to; second, in the world of fitness, the vertical leap is one of the finest measuring tools of overall physical fitness--the litmus test, if you will, of athleticism. Anyone who is of my whiteness and not a collegiate athlete, possessing a 40-inch vert, is a pretty studly individual. I give myself one year for this, although the faster the better, because my aforementioned biological clock will once again begin working against me if I let this lifelong goal stretch out too long.

3. Write a novel by the end of next year. Aspiring to Michael Jordan-esque hang-time might be more feasible than this goal, but notice I did not say publish a novel by next year. I've actually already begun the book. I'm currently working on chapter three, and I expect that when all is said and done, I'll end up with something around 70,000 words in length (we writers tend to deal in word-lengths rather than page numbers, because that's a much better indicator of actual length; pages may range from 200 words to 600 words, depending on how the publisher likes to present the information). Although it is difficult at this point to give a summary of the book's plot, I will say that it is extremely religiously-charged (although not with a particularly LDS flavor, or even a Christian one, at that, but rather with an overall sense of man's relationship with Something Greater Than Himself, if you will). At the same time, I expect it will leave the ultimate decision of God's existence up to the reader. I'm trying to make it an entertaining read, though, and I think, if categorized, the writing style would fall somewhere between a James Joyce and an Arundhati Roy, with a lot of stream-of-consciousness and free indirect discourse, though not to such a degree that it becomes the focus of the work.

So that's it. Maybe I'll write again.

8/21/07

If All the Snowflakes Were Candy Bars and Milkshakes...

I don't like money. I wish that we could all trade jelly beans instead of dollars. But, I guess then the jelly beans would become as frustrating as dollar bills. However, jelly beans are a lot more pleasant to think of, don't you think?

I guess I can only expect some stressful times after coming home from such a good anniversary trip. With the start of school I'm sure there are many college students across the nation that are feeling the same pressures we're feeling right now. While I continue to tell Tony "we'll get through it," I still have the same sick feeling I'm sure he has. Being poor is hard. :) It makes us appreciate one another, though.

Aside from frustrating college expenses, we are exteremly happy and anxiously awaiting the starting of fall semester. Tony is studying hard for the GRE and I am searching for apartments in our future grad school areas. No studying for me, I'm happy with an undergrad!

I'm always excited for the life we have ahead of us. It will be fun to go through all of these adventures together. It would be quite lonely if I were dealing with all of this stuff on my own! I'm glad I have a constant pal who will give me a pat on the back and maybe, if I need it, a shoulder to cry on. Yay for Tonys!

Well, that's all I have to say for now. Think about the jelly beans idea...you like it, don't you? ;)

I know...I'm weird.

8/19/07

One Year Older and Wiser, Too!

Okay, so I'm not celebrating a birthday or anything. I am, however, wrapping up a day of celebrating our one year anniversary! It was a fun little day. We've spent the weekend (beginning Thursday evening) here, in Saint George at a condo. Friday was like the day of my DREAMS! You know what we did? Nothing. Absolutely nothing! It was soooo fantastic. I needed a day like that. A day of PJ's, ice cream, junk food, movies in bed, and not going anywhere. It was great. Then today, we dressed up all pretty like and did some shopping and then went to The Outback for some yummy steak. Probably the most perfect steak I've had there. Yum-o! We came home and had some more ice cream and watched Ice Age on our super cable TV. It's been a good year for us. I'm glad we could take some time to celebrate the wonderful year we've had together. Yay for getting married!

Aside from all of the happiness and celebration going on, I've got almost a whole week off work to just relax and do stuff I want to do! I'm really excited about that. I'm also excited for school to start. I'm anxious to begin my new little major and see what it has in store for me. Hopefully I'll enjoy it! Although I'm QUITE sure I will. I'm really pumped.

I hope all of you had a wonderful, relaxing weekend.






8/13/07

School's Out For Summer..

Well, at least a couple weeks of summer. It's finally happened! I don't have to attend summer classes any longer! (Until next summer, of course.) I'm really excited about the free time I'll have for a short while before Fall semester begins. During my little break I'm going to have a lot of fun. Our one-year anniversary is coming up very quickly! August 18th. We're going to St. George and hanging out in Tony's parent's condo down there. It doesn't seem like it's been a year but at the same time it feels like we've been together forever :). I'm so glad I married my best friend. We really have fun together.

Some of you may know that I recently applied to be manager at Sears. I didn't really want to, but the leads kept asking me to. I felt completely stupid on Saturday, though, when the Store Manager told me someone else was manager and he wasn't sure why I even applied. As stupid as I felt, there was a huge feeling of relief that came along with it. I was so worried about how I was going to manage being a manager (haha) and school. I am quite happy that I can keep working my 20 hours a week. Now I'll be able to see my husband!

Yay for being done with summer school and not being promoted to manager. Life's good.

8/6/07

Statistics is for Losers

Right now I should be getting ready for school, but it's just aerobics class so there isn't much for me to do. I'm just sitting here watching the morning news, looking back at my nearly completed summer semester and I must say, I'm pretty darn proud of myself. I managed to workout everyday, take statistics 221, and work almost full time all at the same time! Furthermore, I am going to PASS that stats class. Hollie passing college math - there's something no one's ever thought of. It was a tough class, but it was tons easier than music theory ever thought about being. I love my new life!

I am getting really excited for our new adventures coming up this year. Tony will finish school, and then in 2008 we'll head out to grad school, most likely in Indiana, and start a new life somewhere else! Hopefully in a nicer apartment! I'm excited about getting a new car and driving across the country with my loverboy. We'll make a five-day trip out of it so as to help me overcome the strong hatred I have for driving to Utah without stopping...*shudder*. I'm starting a new major, which has allowed me to only have classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays, something I'm extremely grateful for.

I'm just really having a good time right now! I love Tony so much and I have so much fun with him! I couldn't imagine going on all of these adventures with anyone but him. I'm really glad he's my best friend :).

I'm also super pumped to go to a BYU football game with Tony...go cougars!

8/2/07

Best Friends

Tony doesn't write here because he thinks no one reads it. Which is most likely true. So...it's Hollie again!

I am so tired but I can't seem to find sleep tonight. I think it's because I am worried about my mom. She just had surgery on Tuesday and they had to keep her another day (I think), and I haven't spoken with anyone about her today so, I worry. Sometimes I wish Indiana and Utah were the same place so I could see her right now. I know at times I "act like a little kid" and this is one of them: I miss my mommy.

Yep, it's true. I'm not at all ashamed to say it, either. My mom and I have become best friends since I've moved out and I wish almost every day that I could just hang out with her and have some fun! Not that Tony isn't fun, I just want to go out with my mom one weekend or something ;).

It's weird how when you're a teenager you think that your mom is so old fashioned and doesn't know anything about life, and then suddenly, one day you realize how smart she really is. You realize how much she cares about you and on that day, you go from being just mother and daughter, to being friends. I'm so grateful for my mom and all the support she always shows me. I'd be one lost puppy without her.


Tell your mom you love her...because she REALLY loves you! :)