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This week in…: The 13th in 2016

April 8, 2016 by Jana 17 Comments

this week

    • Finished Evicted and American Housewife. Working on Fallout. Put 6 books on hold, breaking my vow not to until all the NetGalley books were read. Oh, well.
    • Show Us Your Books is this Tuesday, April 12. Brace yourselves now. show-us-your-books-2016-300by300
    • Finished all the shows and am in a TV desert. Fortunately Kimmy Schmidt comes back to Netflix next week but let’s be honest, I’ll work through that in a weekend. Any suggestions on what to watch that’s not sci-fi or comic book/superhero or The Walking Dead?
    • Cooked nothing exciting but did set a new personal record the other day by assembling a full meal in the crockpot in 6 minutes. Literally. SIX minutes. I even remembered to turn the crockpot on.
    • Found out my state is having a taco festival in June. How do I not go to this?
    • Baseball. Is. Back. #LGM

  • Already started planning next year’s spring break trip. Myrtle Beach, we’re coming for you (sorry, Kelli. I know how you feel about tourists).
  • Purchased the Too Faced Country palette. I want to be one of those people who just has a signature look with standard colors but alas, I am not. So I felt the need to add this to my repertoire (I tried to get a good picture of it but I couldn’t so if you want to see what it looks like, just follow the link). The great makeup refresh of 2016 is almost complete.
  • Internet reads: Speaking of baseball and the Mets, I love what they’ve decided to do this year with their Champion of the Game belt. This interview with Powell’s Book Store. Paperback Paradise. You just have to trust me on that one.
  • Funnies: IMG_1877A9206F61-D6BD-4F92-BE30-E56788D6408CFullSizeRender (35) EFB22F68-42B6-4301-91D0-4DE8EB6AE699

Have a great weekend you guys! See you back on Tuesday for Show Us  Your Books! And, if you’re so inclined, if you’ve been listening to The Armchair Librarians, would you leave us a review on iTunes? Everyone likes a good ego boost, amirite?

 

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Filed Under: Life Tagged With: books, Entertainment, favorites, weekly wrap-up

Jana’s Bad Day Recovery Plan

April 7, 2016 by Jana 17 Comments

Do you guys know the Limp Bizkit song “Break Stuff”? Yes? No? Think you do but you forgot? Pretending not to because it’s a Limp Bizkit song?

Totally understand that last one.

Regardless of how you answer the question, though, here’s the first verse:

It’s just one of those days
When you don’t wanna wake up
Everything is fucked
Everybody sucks
You don’t really know why
But you want justify
Rippin’ someone’s head off
No human contact
And if you interact
Your life is on contract
Your best bet is to stay away motherfucker
It’s just one of those days

That was my day yesterday. Everything that could go wrong did go wrong including an unexpected trip to get my daughter’s finger examined (middle finger, of course, because she’s my child. Except mine would get hurt from overuse instead of tumbling). Fortunately the finger isn’t broken (thank G-d for small miracles) but all the other things sucked a fat one.

Days like yesterday throw me for many days to come because I am a creature of routine and habit and to-do lists. I need organization and structure in my day, at least during working hours since the rest of my day is subject to chaos and when my working hours are destroyed, it’s hard to get myself back together.

I mean, I do eventually get my shit in check, mostly thanks to my foolproof 12 step plan:

Step 1: Overuse the word “motherfucker”. Scream many other expletives. Mostly at people who can’t hear me because the last thing I want is a rumble. I don’t need that Sharks vs. Jets shit in my day.

Step 2: Call the husband. Talk nonsensically and bother him at work for about 30 minutes.

Step 3: Avoid problems by scrolling through all the social media.

Step 4: Declare I hate my life and sketch out a plan to run away and live in a tiny house in the mountains away from everyone except my dogs and cat.

Step 5: Call the husband again. Repeat Step 2

Step 6: Eat dozens of Cheez Its or chips or something else bad for me. Seriously contemplate getting drunk in the middle of the day.

Step 7: Realize getting drunk in the middle of the day is, in fact, a terrible choice. Praise myself for making one good choice. Use it as a gateway to calm the fuck down and start refocusing.

Step 8: Put on a good playlist and sit for a song or two to center and get in a good place.

Step 9: Examine my initial to-do list. Prioritize and determine what needs finishing or attention immediately. Decide to work on that in the short time I have left during the day. Make a new to-do list, realizing that nothing I do is actually urgent and if it has to wait a day or two, the world will survive.

Step 10: Berate myself for overreacting. Berate myself for berating myself. Take a detour from work to eat more Cheez Its. Berate myself for that but tell myself that Cheez Its eaten while in the midst of a terrible day don’t count. Fill up a huge glass of water to cancel out the Cheez Its. Bring it upstairs because real work gets done in the office, not the living room.

Step 11: Sit down at the laptop. Remind myself that everyone has bad days, has unproductive days, and anyone who says they don’t is a big fat fucking liar.

Step 12: Accept all that happened, get over it, and move on.

Bonus step: Complete one task, no matter how small. Call it a good day.

The best part is, if you guys need it, my plan is totally free for you to use! It’s not foolproof and doesn’t always work but it’s mostly useful. Especially if you throw a nap or a few solid of hours of Netflix into the mix.

How do you guys get on track after a bad day?

P.S. There’s no podcast episode in the post today BUT you can listen via your favorite podcasting app! iTunes approved us!

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Filed Under: Life Tagged With: lists, random

On depression and infertility

April 5, 2016 by Jana 28 Comments

So, you guys are probably expecting a recap of my Boston/Massachusetts trip because that’s what all good bloggers do when they get back from vacation. They share pictures of family and sights and food and give all kinds of tips for travelling to wherever just returned from. Unfortunately (fortunately?), I’m a shitty blogger and I have no recap for you. Instead, I want to address two topics close to my heart that of course popped up while I was away. Warning: this a long post, filled with two very emotional topics. I won’t be mad if you don’t read the whole thing. 

The first is Wentworth Miller’s post about the meme mocking him for his post-Prison Break weight gain. If you’re not sure what I’m talking about, you can read Buzzfeed’s summary here (I realize it’s Buzzfeed but it’ll do to help me make my point). Make sure you watch the video. I’ve watched it about 6 times since 2013 and each time it gets more powerful.

Now, it’s no secret around these parts how I feel about Wentworth Miller (I love him. LOVE. HIM. Seriously, if you go to the search bar and type in his name, about a dozen posts will come up. I think I’ve mentioned him more than Matt Damon). When he came out a few years ago and he talked about how he attempted suicide because of wrestling with who he is, it gutted me. To hear that someone so intelligent, talented, successful and let’s face it, hot, tried to kill himself because of a mental illness that he couldn’t control, circumstances he couldn’t control, and choices he felt he had to make to protect himself and his career, destroys me. And I’m glad his attempts failed because if he’d succeeded, the world would be worse off. (And so we’re clear, anytime I hear someone, not just a famous person, attempts or commits suicide, it guts me. But that’s a post for another time, and a topic that I once addressed).http---janasays.com

Because what he’s doing now, speaking out with his stories, sharing his tales of lows and survivals, is inspiring. Not just to people like me, who are suffering from depression, but to people who need to understand depression. To get a glimpse into what goes through the mind of someone living with it. To see it can happen to anyone regardless of looks, money, or fame. To realize depression isn’t just sadness but something so much bigger. To understand that surviving depression isn’t as easy as just “choosing happy” and that for many of us, surviving means assigning meaning to it by speaking out and sharing our stories and letting others enduring it know that they truly aren’t alone.

But beyond that, what I love the most about what he said (and can we pause to say what a beautiful writer he is?) is that he was able to take what should have been a low point in his life and make it positive. That he sees beyond what the paparazzi wanted us to see. That he sees and feels absolute no shame in an unflattering picture because what it represents to him is so much more than what the rest of us see. That he’s using it as a source of strength and recovery and fortitude rather than a reason to hide.

It’s something I know I need to work on. When I find a picture of myself smiling, really smiling, no matter how bad I look in the picture, rather than looking at how fat or ugly I look in the picture, I need to look at from a different lens. I need to see someone who’s survived a whole lot of shit over the last 5 years and the fact that I can still put a genuine smile on my face and enjoy life means more than the fact that I have weight to lose. I need to see those pictures as something to treasure rather than delete. It doesn’t mean forgetting everything; it just means accepting it as part of my story and moving on from it.

 

Which is a semi-decent segway into the next topic.

April 15 marks the one year anniversary of my miscarriage (you can read about that here if you’d like). I still can’t fully write about it without crying but I’m going to try because my friend Justine, an infertility blogger and amazing person, has launched a campaign, We are More Than 1 in 8, that I want to share with you guys (1 in 8 is the statistic for people suffering from infertility). The campaign is dedicated to sharing what life looks like as a result of infertility. To show that not every infertility story has a happy ending (the happy ending being the baby) but that you can redefine your happy ending. The campaign has a mission to bring faces to infertility and to bring together a community of people who, like those suffering from depression, need to feel less alone.

Infertility is a very isolating thing. When you’re dealing with it, you feel like there’s something wrong with you, like you’re being punished for something you did or didn’t do and the punishment is no baby for you. You don’t want to bring it up because you feel like no one can relate and you don’t want to be the one to make someone feel awkward or uncomfortable, even though you know that talking about it is exactly what you need to do.

And then there’s this. No one wants to talk about it because how do you talk about it? How do you explain to someone who has one or 5 or 10 kids that you just can’t have them? That when someone says to you “why didn’t you have more” or “why don’t you have any”, it’s hard not to punch them in the face or snap back with something expletive laden. How do you make someone who’s never had a miscarriage or experienced infertility just how much it hurts and that when you can’t be around a baby, they need to not take it personally?

As for me, my story has a different turn. I had my daughter and then the infertility happened. It’s called secondary infertility and it hurts just as much. Having one child does not eliminate the pain of a miscarriage or seven years of trying for that second child or the failed infertility treatments. Secondary infertility means that my family will never feel complete and that something will always be missing. Adoption isn’t an option for my family for reasons we don’t need to talk about and also, the solution to infertility isn’t always adoption (like suicide, this another post for another time).

This past year has been one of the worst of my life. Do I have a greater appreciation for what I’ve been given in the child department? Yes. Has it helped ease the unbearable pain of losing a pregnancy? No. Has it been the fight of my life to not sink into a paralyzing depression? You bet your ass it has.

I still mark each day by where I would be if I’d had the baby. I still can’t walk down the baby aisles in stores, can’t hold babies, and still struggle with looking at pictures of healthy babies and pregnancies. I still can’t refer to the baby by the name he would have had (although we never got to find out the sex, we’re all confident it was a boy). I wrestle with the months my period is late because I still have hope yet I never want to experience the pain of a miscarriage ever again.

But it’s easier today than it was yesterday. And each day it gets easier. It’s a heartbreak that will never go away but now it’s manageable. I’m learning to live my life with this as part of it, just like my depression.

Depression will most likely be my most constant companion, like a long distance friend who I don’t hear from for awhile and then shows up on my doorstep. I don’t know when she’ll come calling again but I know I can’t run from her or hide from her. I won’t want to let her in but I know she’ll sneak in through a window or something because she’s an asshole like that. And I’ll deal with her in the best way I can or know how, whatever that looks like. And maybe she’ll win one battle and I’ll win the next, and I know it’ll always be a fight, but in the end, she won’t defeat me.

Some days I wonder why I have to deal with so much fucking shit. It seems cruel and unfair. I’m sure there’s a purpose or reason for it and right now, I’m struggling to figure out what that is. But along with that struggle, I’m learning to appreciate all that is good because I’ve survived. I’m still here.

I will continue to survive.

That needs to mean something.

 

 

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Filed Under: Life, mental health Tagged With: mental health, personal life

Blogs you should read instead of mine, part 2

April 1, 2016 by Jana 16 Comments

There’s no weekly recap this week since I’m still on vacation but I was actually proactive and got this little space here set up ahead of time but I thought it’d be a good idea to point you to some other great blogs to read. I did a part 1 back in September so you should take a look at those, too.

Life According to Steph–for whatever reason, she wasn’t on the first list but how could I leave off someone I’ve known off and on for 20 years AND who’s my co-host for all things bookish? I know most of you already know Steph and her awesomeness but if you don’t, visit her now.

Femme Frugality–I can’t say enough nice things about Brynne. Also her blog is wonderful for frugal living tips and she has a great series on her Around the World in 80 Books reading challenge.

A Mindful Migration–Tanya is new to me but I feel like I’ve known her forever. She writes about mindful living and her struggles with self-confidence and self-esteem (I relate all too well) and has some wonderful insight and DIY tips and cat pictures.

Budget and the Beach–another Tonya, another awesome blog. This Tonya is also my roommate at FinCon. She writes about all kinds of finance related stuff from transitioning to being a freelancer to full-time worker to health and fitness on a budget to general lifestyle subjects. PLUS she makes killer videos. Visit her and her Budget and the Beach TV, too.

I Pick Up Pennies–what I love about Abby’s blog is that she’s so open about her struggles with depression and infertility along with her financial ups and downs. It’s rare to find a blogger like that, so willing to share so much of her life with her readers and in a way that’s fun and engaging to read.

I plan to do a part 3 in June when I’m in Phoenix so there’ll be more recommendations coming at you then. In the meantime, let me know:

What are some of your favorite blogs I should be reading?

 

 

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Filed Under: Life Tagged With: Bloggers, recommendations

Playlist with Jana and Erin: 80s movies tribute

March 31, 2016 by Jana 8 Comments

 ​It’s that time again, the last Thursday of the month, the time that Jana and Erin bring you a playlist that usually has a theme with a twist.  This month, we are talking about songs from ’80s movies.  Yep, this playlist is as fun as it sounds.  There are a few obvious choices and a few hidden gems.  Take a look/listen and walk down memory lane with us.  Or, for some of you who weren’t born yet, here’s a history lesson.

 
Fame (1980) – I Sing the Body Electric by the Cast of Fame – Fun fact: this is also the name of a Walt Whitman poem
 
Urban Cowboy (1980) – Love the World Away by Kenny Rogers – Erin’s Texas roots started showing, and this was probably the most difficult soundtrack to choose a favorite song for her.
 
 
9 to 5 (1980) – 9 to 5 by Dolly Parton – We both love Dolly; this was a given.
 
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982) – Somebody’s Baby by Jackson Browne –  The song playing when Stacy is going to lose her virginity to an older man…statutory rape is never good, but this song is.

Easy Money (1983) – Easy Money by Billy Joel – A Rodney Dangerfield movie from the ’80s was going to be represented; “I’m Alright” from Caddyshack almost made the list too.

Valley Girl (1983) – I Melt with You by Modern English – A humming sing-a-long is good stuff … if you don’t know what I’m talking about, you need to listen to the song.

Eddie and the Cruisers (1983) – On the Dark Side by John Cafferty – Damn, this song is soooo good.  Damn, the lead actor of this movie was soooo hot. 

Flashdance (1983) – What a Feeling by Irene Cara – This song still gets regular airplay.  That’s the testament of a good song.

Footloose (1984) – I’m Free by Kenny Loggins – We had to consult each other for this choice.  Too many songs on the Footloose soundtrack to choose from, but you can’t pass up the moment that Ren dances around the factory performing a high bar routine.

Purple Rain (1984) – Jungle Love by The Time – Arguably, the best soundtrack of the ’80s (or all-time), but why not a Prince song?  Apparently, Prince doesn’t do spotify.

Against All Odds (1984) – Against All Odds by Phil Collins – Pretty sure I’ve never seen this movie, but this power ballad of song is awesome.

Streets of Fire (1984) – I Can Dream About You by Dan Hartman – The movie was advertised as “A Rock & Roll Fable”.  Of course, we are going to have a song from such a movie.

St. Elmo’s Fire (1985) – St. Elmo’s Fire (Man in Motion) by John Parr – This song is still in heavy rotation on Australian radio, as it should be.

The Breakfast Club (1985) – Don’t You Forget About Me by Simple Minds – The timeless and definitive teen movie from the ’80s is represented by a timeless song.

The Goonies (1985) – The Goonies R Good Enough by Cyndi Lauper – Gosh, this lady sure can sing some fun songs.  A fun song for a fun movie.

The Legend of Billie Jean (1985) – Invincible by Pat Benatar – Jana mentioned this song, and Erin sang it for the next 3 days.  Friends, listen to this song.

Vision Quest (1985) – Crazy for You by Madonna – A song from the days that Madonna made entertaining music.

Pretty in Pink (1986) – If You Leave by OMD – The song is a reminder of a classic ’80s teen movie moment (the girl runs to the boy at prom leaving her best friend behind); you can’t hear this song and not think of that movie scene.

Dirty Dancing (1987) – She’s Like the Wind by Patrick Swayze – That’s right.  Patrick Swayze sings a song on this soundtrack, and it is wonderful.

The Lost Boys (1987) – Good Times by INXS with Jimmy Barnes – Americans don’t know Jimmy Barnes, but Australians sure do.  When the quintessential Australian band teamed with an iconic Aussie voice, they made a fantastic song.

Disorderlies (1987) – Edge of a Broken Heart by Bon Jovi – Duh.  Erin has a say in this playlist.  Bon Jovi is represented…but y’all, this song is really, really good.  Promise!

Nightmare on Elm Street 3 (1987) – Dream Warriors by Dokken – Duh.  Jana and Erin created this playlist.  Hair bands are represented.  Plus, an ’80s teen horror movie needed to be represented.

Say Anything (1989) – In Your Eyes by Peter Gabriel – John Cusack holding a boombox over his head to profess his love for a girl.  Classic ’80s moment. 

What song(s) did we miss?  We know there’s more because we knowingly left off so many.  Tell us your favorites.

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P.S. While you can totally go to iTunes and subscribe  (just search podcasts for The Armchair Librarians. Hopefully the cover art has updated by now and it’s actually easy to read), you can also listen to the Armchair Librarians right here on this very blog. This week’s episode contains a very special cohost, my daughter, Erica, and we chat with her about some of her favorite books. Hope you enjoy! And also, this week should be (fingers crossed) the last one with major audio issues. We think, thanks to some help from Stephanie, it’s all fixed.

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: Entertainment, music, playlists

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Jana

I'm Jana ...

A book reading, nail polish wearing, binge watching, music loving, dog owning, reluctant cheer mom.
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