personal

27
Dec

All through college, my partner in crime was my friend Kristin. We were the laughing too loudly too late, closing down the coffeeshop, rewriting song lyrics, running around 24-hour stores late into the night/early into the morning, mostly innocent sort of trouble-making duo. I was so happy she came to visit me and Andy this spring. We took her up to Sedona and the Grand Canyon (oh, how horrible to have to go back to these places every first time friends come to visit us here…) and here’s a few photos from her time here.

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Category : personal | photos | Blog
8
Dec

While the rest of the country is cold, admittedly I’m enjoying the moderate weather in Phoenix, where we don’t have to worry about defroster settings on our cars or pipes freezing overnight. Being from the east coast, I do miss the cold every once in a while. So, when Jared, Ray and Allison came into town in late February, we did a 2-day trip up to Sedona, Flagstaff and the Grand Canyon.

Sedona, Jared

Grand Canyon, February 22, 2009

Along the hwy from Flagstaff to Grand Canyon

Category : personal | photos | Blog
3
Dec

While Laura was in town in February, she and I went to check out First Friday events in downtown (see thispost), went to some kind of delicious chocolate festival and walked around Bobby’s Rock at the base of the Echo Canyon trail at Camelback Mountain. We had our cameras and although it was too early for really nice light, I found a nice spot for some portraits of my good friend.
Laura at Camelback

We checked out the Phoenix Art Museum and I especially enjoyed the lighting inside and outside. Below is the side-effect of something unofficially called “no flash corner.”
Midtown

There’s also a cool exhibit I always have to go into when we go to the museum. It’s disorienting and very peaceful at the same time.
Midtown

Andy and I weren’t able to get back out to Colorado to see her family and her baby until just a few weeks ago. If you’d like to meet him now (as opposed to whenever I work through photos from Feb-Nov and post them here!), Andy just shared his photos on his blog.

Category : personal | photos | Blog
27
Nov

I’m one of those can’t be separated from my phone types. To be more precise, my iPhone and my Camelbak water bottle are usually both within arms reach. I’ve been contemplating jailbreaking my iPhone for a few weeks for a few reasons I consider to be worth it: I can stay logged in to run apps in the background (Pandora or the infamous Google Voice app, for example) while I use other features (like check email or answer a text.) I could use quick SMS texting to not even bother with switching between apps to answer a text. Also, I’d like to be able to customize my email and text sounds beyond what is currently offered since my husband and most of my friends have iPhones and nobody knows who’s getting the text or email when we hear it (since we all use “tri-tone” for texts and don’t have an option for email sounds.) And last on my short list but certainly not last on my list, is using the Google Voice app itself. Jailbreaking is easy and the newest version won’t brick your phone, and you can still sync to iTunes and buy things from the app store. Maybe I’ll really do it this coming weekend, I keep chickening out.

Maybe that’s because I really am otherwise very happy with my phone. Besides recording voicework, I hardly ever have to get out my laptop at home. I’m quite content to plug my iPhone into the nearest outlet and drain the battery with email, looking up recipes, youtube videos and playing games. I wanted to share some of my favorite apps, mostly time killers but they’re wonderful time killers.

1) Remote (free) – This is the most awesome yet simple thing I can do with my phone, and I love it. We have the audio inputs from our receiver hooked up to our Airport router, and our desktop mac is usually on. You can use this app to play music off your iTunes library from wherever you are in the house, and then by just changing the input on the receiver to Aux 2 or whatever it is, voila! Our entire library is accessible in our living room via our cell phones. Other friends with iPhones, once given access via a numerical password from the computer, can put in “requests” for music, since they can then also view the library. We can thumbs up or down their choices. I love it!!!

2) Shazam (free) – Hold it near the speaker and it’ll tell you what song is playing. Apple did a commercial featuring this app and I think most everyone must have it by now.

3) HeyWAY Pro (paid) – There’s no use in texting my husband when he’s somewhere along his commute, but trying to coordinate dinner and evening schedules calls upon this app. You send a request to someone to share their location, and with one button they can agree to do that. You then get a pretty accurate mini-google map and a ping on your phone once they’ve responded. Also, you can send out your location without being asked, and only send it to certain people (friends you’re meeting up with, etc). It doesn’t require a separate login/password, but allows you to add friends to your list only once they’ve confirmed via email on their phones. Pretty slick.

4) Defender Chronicles (paid) – This is not a productivity app, if you hadn’t already guessed. It’s a tower defense game and it’s awesome. I seriously love this game. When you have actual work to do, or an incoming call, it auto-saves wherever you left off when you close out of the app.

5) CatPaint (paid) – Don’t just blow this off as some stupid pointless app. It’s a wonderful, pointless app. Select any photo in your library, click to add resizable cats (and shake your phone to delete cats you’ve added.)

I present, Exhibit A, created to pass the time:

CatPaint - downtime

…and Exhibit B, to make a point:

Panthers 0wn Cardinals

Panthers 0wn Cardinals

Go back and add some cats to yesterday’s Thanksgiving festivities!

Category : personal | Blog
22
Nov

I’ve spent considerable time today working on a backlog of photos I’d had sitting on my laptop for months. I used to be so much better about this, posting pics from trips and friends’ visits within a week or so of when it happened. So without further delay, here’s part one of my photo update! This is from when my good friend Laura came to Phoenix to visit for a weekend. Andy had left for the Southern Short Course photojournalism workshop that weekend and it allowed for a lot more girl time. We didn’t stay up late braiding each other’s hair and eating Twizzlers like we did in high school, but nothing beats time with awesome people who you’ve known so long they’re just family.

February 2009 First Friday Phoenix

February 2009 First Friday Phoenix

February 2009 First Friday Phoenix

February 2009 First Friday Phoenix

February 2009 First Friday Phoenix

Category : personal | photos | Blog
4
Oct

I don’t remember anything specific about the movie Renaissance Man, aside from the fact that we were watching part of it during high school history class and I don’t think it really tied into anything being taught in the class. And I’m pretty sure Robin Williams was in it. I did, however, take away the idea of a Renaissance Man… and I liked it, and at that moment I thought it’d be a good thing to strive for.

My friend Jill, a multi-talented photographer/crafter/amazing cook/gracious party host, wanted someone to take gardening classes with her. When my family lived in upstate New York, my pastry chef-turned-Realtor dad grew vegetables in a huge 30x50ft garden, and also had probably 20-30 fruit trees in a large orchard AND we had several flower beds on our 3+ acres, all beautiful and blooming and producing so much we had to give it away. While that’s a great example of what can be done in more ideal growing conditions, it also stands as a great example of what amazing and productive things can be done in your spare time. At this point, after gardening classes with Jill, Andy and I have a compost bin in our patio/yard space and somewhat less vague plans than a few months ago on how and what and when to plant in this tiny space to be able to enjoy homegrown vegetables in the desert.

It’s easy to lead a more well-rounded life when things are going well with your relationships, your job, your finances and all the other big determining factors of life. When one or more of those areas are suffering, that’s when it’s a struggle to find the energy to do more than just exist in your own life. That’s when I think it’s most important to push and fill your time with something enjoyable and give yourself something to look forward to, to help through those down times. I know I’m lucky to be in the radio industry and to never have been laid off, to have a freelance career that continues to grow even in a down economy, and to live in Phoenix and be on the positive side of a mortgage in a city ridden with foreclosures. I have a great husband, wonderful friends, a career and job I enjoy, pets I love and hobbies I can delve into and share with friends. I expect myself to live that Renaissance woman life in times like this.

I hope to share some of these interests on this blog. Moreso, I hope to get back in touch with a lot of the things I enjoy and use this blog to help me remember to do that. I have half a closet, several drawers and boxes full of hobbies I’ve set aside and seldom visited. I don’t know that I’ll be cross-stitching or quilting or doing any still-life drawings this week, but I hope to bring more of my hobbies out of storage and enjoy them in the time I certainly can make in my day. Being a voice over talent is an enjoyable part of my day, but there’s more to life than how you make your living.

Category : personal | voiceover | Blog