Saturday, November 28, 2015
The Quoteables [November 28]
The Quoteables is an original, weekly (sometimes bookish, sometimes not) meme in which I share a few of the quotes that I have been loving.
This week's quote is:
"I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; and because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do the something that I can do."
— Edward Everett Hale
Friday, November 27, 2015
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 27
What You Wore Today:
Clothes:
- A white, collared dress shirt beneath a gray pull-over sweater
- Black jeggings
- Black socks
- Gray, high-heeled booties
Jewelry:
- A gold pendant necklace with a tree on it
Nails:
- Sally Hansen Complete Salon Manicure in “Trouble Maker,” (500 (plum))
- Revlon Quick Dry Top Coat in “Clear,” (960)
Hair:
- Straight (because if I don't straighten it, it is puffy, curly and VERY annoying...)
- A “headband” made out of french-braided hair, parted to the left
Makeup:
- Mabelline Dream Pure BB Cream in “Light/Medium Sheer Tint”
- Almay Smart Shade Concealer in “Light/Medium,” (020)
- Covergirl + Olay Eye Rehab Concealer Cream in “Light Pale,” (330)
- Revlon Photoready Translucent Finisher
- Neautral smokey eye created with the Neutrogena Eye Quad
- Winged eyeliner with the Mabelline Master Graphic Liquid Eyeliner in “Striking Black”
- Mabelline Lash Sensational Mascara in “Black” on lashes
- Physician's Formula Blush/Bronzer duo in “Warm Nude”
- Salon Perfect Brow Defining Kit
- Mabelline Great Lash Mascara in “Clear” (for eyebrows)
- Covergirl lipstick in “Flame,” (300 (red))
Labels:
30 day writing challenge,
day twenty-seven,
life,
personal,
writing
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Bookish Wishlist | 2015
Mentioned in this video....
1. The Infernal Devices (Box Set) by Cassandra Clare
2. Through the Dark by Alexandra Bracken
3. The Fangirl's Guide to the Galaxy by Sam Maggs
4. Slasher Girls and Monster Boys by Various
5. The Wrath and the Dawn by Renee Ahdieh
6. Never Never by Brianna R. Shrum
7. Salt and Stone by Victoria Scott
8. We All Looked Up by Tommy Wallach
9. Harry Potter Funko POP Figurines
What is at the top of your bookish wishlist?
Labels:
2015,
birthday,
bookish wishlist,
books,
Christmas,
holiday,
One More Chapter,
reading,
TBR
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Teaser Tuesday [November 24]
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly bookish meme hosted by Jenn of A Daily Rhythm. All you have to do is grab your current read, open to a random page, and share two teaser sentences (that don't give too much away).
This week's teaser:
If the oxygenator breaks down, I'll
suffocate. If the water reclaimer breaks down, I'll die of thirst. If
the Hab breaches, I'll just kind of explode. If none of those things
happen, I'll eventually run out of food and starve to death. So yeah.
I'm fucked.
— The Martian by Andy Weir
Labels:
A Daily Rhythm,
books,
quote,
reading,
teaser,
teaser tuesday
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day Seventeen
Bullet-Point Your Day:
- 7:45am – First alarm.
- 8:00am – Second alarm.
- 8:30am – Finally managed to pull myself out of bed and began getting ready for work.
- 9:05am – Packed my purse and played around on my phone after having finished with my makeup and hair.
- 9:25am – Left for work.
- 9:30am – Clocked in and began putting up the bounce house. We have Bounce & Play every other Tuesday/Thursday, where little kids can come in a jump in the bounce house or goof around in our indoor soccer field. It's a lot of fun, but the bounce house is VERY difficult to set up; especially when you're by yourself.
- 9:45am – Finished setting up the field house; sat down in an attempt to REGULATE MY BREATHING, OMG.
- 10:10am – Only two families have shown up so far—oftentimes, it is a hit or miss—and after having walked around a few times saying good morning, I am hiding out in the recreation office. Parents get weirded out if you stand off to the side, smiling at and watching their kids for two hours, even if it is your job.
- 10:30am-12:00pm – Walked a few rounds every fifteen minutes or so, making sure everyone was getting along and that the fans/seals keeping the air inside the bounce house were all secure. Quite a few more families showed up; probably the most people I've had in a while.
- 12:00pm – Bounce & Play is over! Began cleaning up all the toys and putting the bounce house away.
- 12:15pm – Clocked out and headed home; stopped to get a Dr. Pepper from Circle K on the way.
- 12:40pm – Sat down to eat lunch and rewatch last night's episode of Scorpion with my mom.
- 1:15pm – Went upstairs to lay in bed; checked various social media sites and drifted in and out of sleep.
- 2:15pm – Prepared my rabbits' lunch and dinner.
- 2:40pm – Left for work. Again.
- 2:45pm – Clocked in.
- 2:55pm – Usually, at this time, I would be heading over to the school to pick up our after-school kids, but they had early release today and were already at the center. Instead, I walked in to chaos, as someone had decided to let 40 kids put on roller-skates and topple over one another in the gym.
- 3:10pm – Took the kids over to one of the classrooms and worked on homework. More chaos.
- 4:30pm – Helped out with art.
- 5:00pm – Switched over to monitor the batting cages and had a “vending machine dinner,” which consisted of a Dr. Pepper and some chocolate, coupled with a bag of crackers I brought with me from home. After dinner, I kept an eye on the batting cages and finished reading “Adulting: How to Become a Grown-Up in 468 Easy(ish) Steps,” by Kelly Williams Brown. A really helpful and insightful book!
- 7:00pm – Put away the batting cages (the machines are heavy and I probably almost knocked myself unconscious a few times while moving them) and hung out in the recreation office, waiting to see if anyone would show up for open gym. They didn't.
- 8:00pm – Clocked out and headed home (usually I have to walk home on Tuesdays, which I HATE doing after dark, but today I got a ride); stopped to get a Dr. Pepper from Circle K on the way. I drink a lot of Dr. Pepper...
- 8:15pm – Chatted with my parents for a bit about our day's activities and then fed the rabbits their dinner.
- 8:45pm – Began working on my online Math exam for school; today was the last day of classes before the next term—which begins in two weeks—and the exam was my final assignment. So, SO happy to be done with the course; Math is my least favorite subject.
- 9:40pm – UHHHHHHHHG, MATH........
- 10:15pm – FINISHED MY EXAM, YESSSSSSSS!! Unless I totally bomb the assignment, I should pass the class with a C. Not too bad, given my history with the subject. After a celebratory dance, I wrote up a few blog posts and played with the rabbits for a bit.
- 11:00pm – Took a shower and did all the obligatory before-bed stuff.
- 11:30pm – Climbed into bed. Usually I am already there, as I save the 10:30-11:30 hour for reading, but I did not have time tonight. I spent the next half hour checking social media and watching Youtube videos.
- 12:00am – Created tomorrow's To-Do list, plugged my phone in to the charger and shut off the TV. Goodnight!
. . . .
I will be participating in the 30 Day Writing challenge every day this
month, but will not be posting all of them. If you're curious, you can
view the list of challenges here (I switched day sixteen and seventeen).
Labels:
30 day writing challenge,
life,
personal,
say seventeen,
writing
Top Ten Tuesday [November 17]
Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish. Each week they update their blog with a list of ten things that have to do with a predetermined topic.
This week's topic is: Ten Quotes I Loved From Books.
1. "What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable?" — An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
2. "What a treacherous thing it is to believe that a person is more than a person." — Paper Towns by John Green
3. "I get up. I walk. I fall down. Meanwhile, I keep dancing." — Bird By Bird by Anne Lamott
4. "Some people are beautiful. Not in looks. Not in what they say. Just in what they are." — I Am the Messenger by Marcus Zusak
5. "No one every asks a kid for her opinion, but it seems to me that growing means that you stop hoping for the best, and start expecting the worst. So how do you tell an adult that maybe everything wrong in the world stems from the fact that she's stopped believing the impossible can happen?" — Between the Lines by Jodi Picoult and Samantha van Leer
6. "Faith with proof is no faith at all." — The Ask and the Answer by Patrick Ness
7. "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." — Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
8. "I'm always finding humans at their best and worst. I see their ugly and their beauty, and I wonder how the same thing can be both." —The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak
9. "It occurred to me that the business of surviving preluded a great many things, exploring and falling in love not least among them." — Hollow City by Ransom Riggs
10. "Words were the most powerful tool. Simple and so often underestimated. They could heal. They could destroy." — Onyx by Jennifer L. Armentrout
What are some of your favorite book quotes?
Labels:
books,
quotes,
reading,
The Broke and the Bookish,
Top Ten Tuesday,
TTT,
tuesday
Teaser Tuesday [November 17]
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly bookish meme hosted by Jenn of A Daily Rhythm. All you have to do is grab your current read, open to a random page, and share two teaser sentences (that don't give too much away).
This week's teaser:
"Loving someone is not a onetime thing, something earned once then secured forever. It's more like a human six-year-old, something delightful but also in need of vigilance and attention lest it fall out of a tree and break its wrist."
— Adulting: How to Become a Grown-Up in 468 Easy(ish) Steps by Kelly Williams Brown
Labels:
A Daily Rhythm,
books,
quote,
reading,
teaser tuesday,
TT,
tuesday
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Fall Time, Cozy Time Book TAG
Mentioned in this video....
1. Vicious by V.E. Schwab
2. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling
3. Percy Jackson & The Olympians: The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan
4. Cinder by Marissa Meyer
5. The Archived by Vitoria Schwab
6. Lux by Jennifer L. Armentrout
Labels:
2015,
autumn,
books,
booktube,
fall,
Fall Time Cozy Time,
Novels and Nonsense,
One More Chapter,
reading,
tag
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Teaser Tuesday [November 10]
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly bookish meme hosted by Jenn of A Daily Rhythm. All you have to do is grab your current read, open to a random page, and share two teaser sentences (that don't give too much away).
This week's teaser:
"She's our lost princess. And she's coming home."
— Winter by Marissa Meyer
Labels:
A Daily Rhythm,
books,
quote,
reading,
teaser,
teaser tuesday,
TT
Top Ten Tuesday [November 10]
Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish. Each week they update their blog with a list of ten things that have to do with a predetermined topic.
This week's topic is: Ten Book-to-Movie Adaptations I Cannot Wait For.
1. The Death Cure (The Maze Runner #3) — I really, really need this movie in my life. Like, now.
2. Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children — Not only is this book series one of my absolute favorites, but Asa Butterfield is playing Jacob! I can't wait to see how they adapt it to the big screen.
3. The 5th Wave — That trailer, though. So, so good.
4. Alice Through the Looking Glass (Alice in Wonderland #2) — I just saw the trailer for this the other day and FREAKED. OUT.
5. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
6. Ready Player One
7. Allegiant (Divergent #3) — I have yet to find the time to sit down and watch the first two movies, but I am super excited for Allegiant to be adapted.
These next few books are not being turned into movies but they should be:
8. The Archived by Victoria Schwab — The atmosphere, characters and story made this book extremely dark and tense and I think it would make a good movie.
9. Across the Universe by Beth Revis
10. The Darkest Minds — If done well, this would be a really fun/exciting/tense watch.
Labels:
adaptations,
books,
film,
movies,
reading,
The Broke and the Bookish,
Top Ten Tuesday,
TTT
Sunday, November 8, 2015
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day Eight
A Book You Love and One You Didn't:
As someone who has spent the
majority of her free time reading these last few years, this is a
very difficult question. I have read and loved a great number of
books for many different reasons. I love the Harry Potter
series because it embodies growth—from youth to adulthood—and
reminds me of my childhood. I love A Series of Unfortunate Events
because not every person you meet in life will be kind, and The
Night Circus because sometimes you just need to believe in
something, and that something is magic enough. I love the Mara Dyer
trilogy because I enjoy reading about girls who are not afraid to get
their hands bloody dirty, Percy Jackson for the quests and
adventures, and The Darkest Minds trilogy because sometimes
super heroes make bad decisions, too. I love the Infernal Devices
trilogy for its representation of love that transcends time and the
Across the Universe trilogy for hope that transcends galaxies.
The Chaos Walking trilogy is a great representation of the
harsh realities of war while modern contemporaries like Amy and
Roger's Epic Detour discuss relateable issues like death, stress,
love and loss. Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children romanticizes
peculiarity in a world where everything outside of “normal” is
strange, and The Lunar Chronicles brings to life the classic
fairy tales I knew and loved as a child with a modern twist;
sometimes the princess needs to save herself.
There are so many more that
I could name, but each of the above books and series has made me feel
something at one time or another and that is why I love them so much.
As for a book/books I did not love, it usually makes the list because
I got nothing out of it – no feelings, emotion or personal
attachment to either the story or characters. Sometimes this makes a
book a quick, light read that I can enjoy for a few hours but, more
often than not, I like my books to have a little more substance.
What are some books you love?
. . . .
I will be participating in the 30 Day Writing challenge every day this
month, but will not be posting all of them. If you're curious, you can
view the list of challenges here.
Thursday, November 5, 2015
October Wrap-up & November TBR
Mentioned in this video....
1. The Retribution of Mara Dyer by Michelle Hodkin
2. Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
3. The Road by Cormac McCarthy
4. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J.K. Rowling
5. Fairest by Marissa Meyer (TBR)
6. Winter by Marissa Meyer (TBR)
Did you guys read anything good in October?
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day Four
Ten Facts About Yourself:
2. Though I switched my
major from Early Childhood Education to English/Creative Writing
when I was a freshman in college, I keep finding myself working in
positions that require me to teach children. First the day care,
then summer camp and, even now, my job as a recreation associate has
me helping kids with their homework every day after school.
3. I did not get to walk
with the rest of my class during graduation. Senior year of high
school was very difficult for me for many reasons. I was constantly
sick and struggled with depression, which caused me to miss quite a
bit of school. This resulted in my failing two very important
classes – both of which were needed in order to graduate. I
received my diploma a year later than all of my friends, after completing
both of the classes online. I don't talk about this experience much
because 1.) it was seven years ago, and 2.) I am still ashamed.
4. I suffer from anxiety.
It used to be crippling, but I currently have a much better handle
on it. I still hate change, though, and it takes a lot of convincing
for me to make plans that do not involve my house/family and a good
book. I still have bad days, of course, where I do not talk
to anyone, but they are not as frequent as they used to be.
5. I had laser-eye surgery
when I was three years old and I can still vaguely remember the
experience. After it was done, I still had to wear glasses until
high school—which was when my vision finally started to get
better—only to have to pick them back up a year or so after graduation. Currently, my vision is not great.
6. I had to have two of my
wisdom teeth pulled a few months ago, at the age of twenty-five.
7. My hair is naturally
very curly/frizzy. No one ever believes this, though, because I have
straightened it since high school.
8. I have never had a
proper boyfriend. I was too shy (and not particularly good-looking) during high school and though I have gone on plenty of dates
since then, they have never progressed past the "seeing" stage. Usually it is my
fault; I get scared easily and push people away.
9. I was given a stuffed
blue cat by a friend of my mom's when I was only a few days old. Her
name is Whiskers and I still have her.
10. I hated to write until
a third grade English project. When I didn't complete the assignment
on time, my teacher made me stay in
during recess to finish it. We were supposed to write a short story
and, eventually, I conjured up a situation in which four siblings
were whisked off to a magical land by a talking black cat. I had a
lot of fun with it and have wanted to be a writer ever since.
What are some interesting facts about you?
. . . .
I will be participating in the 30 day Writing challenge every day this
month, but will not be posting all of them. If you're curious, you can
view the list of challenges here.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Teaser Tuesday [November 3]
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly bookish meme hosted by Jenn of A Daily Rhythm. All you have to do is grab your current read, open to a random page, and share two teaser sentences (that don't give too much away).
This week's teaser:
The pain was relentless, the agony never ending. She pleaded for death, but it never came.
— Fairest by Marissa Meyer
Labels:
A Daily Rhythm,
books,
quote,
reading,
teaser,
teaser tuesday,
TT
Monday, November 2, 2015
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 2
Your Earliest Memory:
Growing up is to let things
go – that embarrassing moment from middle school you thought you
would never get over, your first crush, your first love, friends and
moments that seemed to drift away without your realizing and,
sometimes, the good memories that go along with them. You don’t
mean to forget Christmases and birthdays, what your grandfather's
face looked like, the name of your kindergarten teacher. It all
disappears on its own – sometimes triggered back into your life at
odd moments and sometimes not, but you still feel the absence of it;
a great, wonderful Used To Be that is no more. I have a lot of “early
memories” crammed into a corner of my mind I rarely visit, simply
because attempting to sort through what actually happened and what my
brain has conjured up in an attempt to fill these fuzzy holes within
my memory is too great a task.
I have only lived three
places my entire life; two houses and one trailer with my parents and
our ever-growing family. We lived in a trailer park for the first two
or three years of my life, moving out shortly after my brother was
born. There wasn't a lot of room, but we didn't need it. I don't
remember much from the time we spent there—I was pretty young—but
I do recall a particularly fun Easter afternoon spent hunting colored
eggs in our “backyard.” I relive the memory almost like an
out-of-body experience; me, running through the grass in a cute
Easter dress, trying to find the eggs before my cousins did. My
twenty-five year old self does not find this memory particularly
exciting or different (I have had many Easters since then), but, for
some reason, this one sticks out in my mind.
I remember my laser-eye
surgery (a very memorable experience for a three-year old), hiding on
the staircase in an attempt to scare my cousin in our first house,
dangling my legs out of our garage's second-story window with my
father (despite my mother's protests), playing with my friends at
school, threatening to run away over something silly, building my
own, personal fort at the top of my closet in our second house,
getting into trouble for jumping off of our deck onto a trampoline
(my dad's idea), experiencing my first crush in seventh grade, cold,
winter mornings in high school, playing bells at church, performing
on stage with my school's choir and our backstage shenanigans during
May Fiesta, our trip to Chicago, my first kiss... So many wonderful,
dreadful, random memories came pouring out when I sat down to write
today, and I was surprised by how fuzzy some of them have become; how
difficult it was to tell reality apart from what I thought had
happened. This is what you let go of when you get older – you
forget the embarrassing stuff you never thought you would forget, the
stuff that seemed important at the time, and hold on to things that
you probably would have deemed unimportant. It's sad, but also kind
of great, too. I hope there are many more of these “small”
moments to come.
What is your earliest memory?
. . . .
I will be participating in the 30 day Writing challenge every day this month, but will not be posting all of them. If you're curious, you can view the list of challenges here.
Labels:
30 day writing challenge,
day two,
earliest memory,
life,
personal,
writing
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