Proven.

I was washing my hands in the ladies room at work last week when a woman in my office asked me if I had lost weight.

“Oh!  I said.  ”Thank you, but no.”

“Well, you look great!”

Why thank you, I thought.  And then I caught a glimpse of myself in the full length mirror as I left the room.  I looked…thin.

I knew it had to be my shoes: nude pointed toe leather pumps.  I picked them up for an unimaginable deal ($15 on clearance) at Off Broadway Shoe Warehouse at the beginning of summer and haven’t looked back.  I love their height and their ability to go with just about any skirt or dress.

Black pointed toe pumps are essential to my office and every day wardrobe.  I have several pairs – from patent leather to kitten heal – and I’ve been sporting them since ’04.  But am I on to something with the wearing of the nude?

Maybe so.

Today, while browsing blogs, I came across this site which sells all sorts of lovely paper prints – calendars and note cards.

I have just added the notecards with the above print to my online shopping bag at Inslee By Design after reading the description:

Shop

Stems

A wise woman once told me that I should never be without pointed toe nude pumps. She said they go with every outfit and always make you look thinner. I figured, why not test this theory on note cards. Box of ten 4×6″ flat cards printed on 100 lb cover stock and white envelopes.

My goodness.  If two people say it is it a fact?  I’m taking a Critical Thinking course through work for two days later this week, I’ll get back to you on that one.

I am smitten with Inslee’s whimsical illustrations and seemingly simple concepts of ladies in dress.

Happy browsing!

What are you reading?

Have you seen this blog?

I adore it.

The Underground New York Public Library (UNYPL) is dedicated to New Yorkers who read on the subway.

I have never lived in New York City but I am a huge fan of public transportation in other cities I’ve called home.  I know how great it is to let someone else do the driving and get some extra pages in on my commute.  Especially before and after work, getting on a train or a bus is like a forced breather.

A Labor Day homecoming.

Being home over Labor Day weekend was a very good thing.  Fall was happening there and it was absolutely gorgeous.

I got that happy feeling I always used to get at the end of the summer in Columbia County.  School was about to start and our family had one last long weekend to celebrate by living it up at the lake and going to the fair.

I spent time with my parents on the boat napping and catching up.

And Micaela drove out from Boston and we cheered on the county fair together.  The fairgrounds looked a lot more crowded from when Chris and I celebrated our wedding reception just a few months ago.

There were cows and prize chickens, blue ribbon wool and lots of carnival rides.  Each day boasted amazing weather.  It was as much as my dad and the rest of the fair board could ask for, as great weather generally equals stellar attendance.

We took a drive down to Berkshire Pottery in Hillsdale and were driving back just as the sun hung low in the sky.

And I always come down with a mild case of homesickness after I get off the plane in Colorado.  I daydream of rolling fields of drying cornstalks and the evening autumn sun disappearing into the woods.

Then I snap out of it and settle back into life in Denver.  This past weekend I spent Friday night with girlfriends writing at a coffeehouse.  On Saturday, C and I rode bikes all over Congress Park, we tried out a new church, tested some sleeping bags at REI and then had dinner at My Brother’s Bar.  This morning we had brunch with C’s mom and her husband and then went to H Mart.

It’s good here.  Very good.

The leaves are just starting to turn in the mountains and Aspen is right on track to turn in the next two weeks.  From a thirsty deep green to orange and yellow.

And we’re lucky to be going back to Columbia County in two weeks for my cousin’s wedding to experience a little more of that beautiful fall.

Three cheers!

A fine rain.

The night before last I woke up to what I thought was wind.

That’s what we get here sometimes.  Wild, whipping pockets of harsh wind that blow the cushions off the rockers on our balcony.

Lest you think Denver is like Annie Proulx’s literary Wyoming plains, we live on the seventh floor of a high-rise building.  It’s always a bit windy up here.

But it wasn’t wind I heard.  It was something I’ve not had in a long while.  It was rain.  And it continued.

At eight a.m., it was dark and cloudy and coming down just beautifully.  At 10, at noon and at three.  Still raining.

Everyone was talking about it.

Meeting after meeting yesterday people were saying how happy they were.  ”Isn’t it beautiful outside?”  We said to one another.

A project manager I work with said he prepared to drive his kids to school as they normally ride their bikes.  When he offered, his second- and fourth-graders both begged him to pedal in the rain.  ”We’re not made of sugar, Dad,” the fourth-grader said.  ”Rain is good for us.”

Indeed it is!

 

Apartment living at its best.

On the days I mobile work from home I often do laundry.  Generally, the first load goes into the washer at six a.m.

We share the machines with the rest of the floor, so it’s important to keep a timer as a reminder to switch out your load just in case a neighbor is waiting for a machine to open up.  In a stroke of luck, our floor is full of considerate neighbors.

Every Tuesday, one of our neighbors has a sweet housekeeper, Caroline, visit her home.  Caroline cleans the apartment and does laundry.

So today, in between conference calls and real estate fires that needed to be put out in Utah, I forgot I had ignored my alarm and when I made it to the laundry room, my neighbor’s laundry was in the machines…and my dryer load was on the counter, folded and neatly stacked.

I felt rewarded for being inconsiderate.

As I collected my clothes and walked back down the hallway, I heard my neighbor’s door open and I turned around to see Caroline making her way to the laundry room.  She is a piece of cardigan-wearing sunshine.

“Did you fold my laundry?!” I smiled.

“Sure did, honey!  And for heaven’s sake, I put in a dryer sheet in for you because, little miss, you could have electrocuted yourself with the amount of static in that machine!”  Caroline has a little drawl that is pleasing as peach pie.

I do declare I’ll have to do laundry again next Tuesday in the hopes of running into her again.

I wonder how C feels about hiring a housekeeper.

I wonder what Caroline does on Wednesdays…

P.S.  Years back, our neighbor shared a housekeeping secret with us.  Caroline has created what Micaela and I know as “Magic Cleaning Solution” for mirrors.  It’s one part rubbing alcohol to one part water.  Your mirrors have never looked better.  Promise.

Garden Delight.

Last night I met up with a new friend at the Denver Botanic Gardens.

We walked and talked for hours, reveling in the garden’s beauty.  We watched the light change over this peaceful bit of the city.

The sky and sunset reminded me that fall is ready to come to Denver and I imagine, that after this dark summer, Denver is ready to embrace her.

The Gardens are such a gorgeous place.  Can you get over the magic of those twinkling lights in the trees?

I can’t either!

End of summer anticipation.

I pulled the trigger and bought a plane ticket for some end of summer Labor Day weekend lake time.

The last time I was at the lake was in May.  It was a week before my wedding and I was about to lose my mind.  I was torn between wanting to turn my brain completely off and fall asleep in the hammock with Fifty Shades of Grey and wanting to just get my bottom back to my parents’ house so I could connect to WiFi and continue emailing everyone and their brother about last minute reception items.

So after this long, hot, sad summer in the arid Denver desert, it’s with incredible happiness I’m arriving in Hartford on Thursday.

I need me some blue sky and big water.

Shrimp cocktail and white wine on the boat.

Snuggles with Glitter Kitty on the deck.

And the Columbia County Fair starts tomorrow night. I hope to be sipping on a 4H Milk Shed shake the minute I get in the gates.  I can’t wait to see Diamond Rio on Sunday with my cousins.

Weeeeeee!

Firecracker Fourth and Pineapple Pie.

Our Independence Day that fell on a Wednesday was all around warm, lovely, and relaxing.

We spent Tuesday night in with N and L in Lone Tree and woke up to little baby whimpers next door in the nursery and a large gulp of coffee.

The Liberty Dash, much like last year, was blazing hot and dirt-road dusty and in direct sunlight most of the distance.  Not the most fun, but certainly satisfying at the finish.

We spent the afternoon into dusk with C and KS in Cheesman, under the trees, drinking beer and chattering in the damp heat that hung over the park.

C made the best fried chicken I’ve ever had (juicy, tender, salty!) as well as some kick bottom coleslaw (colorful and refreshing!)  KS and I brought pies.

It was a good day for friends.

Be Kind to Something That’s Mine, and Be Kind to Me.

When I was little I owned the movie soundtrack to Disney’s Aladdin.  I bought it with my own money while in Disney World with my family.  I loved it.

A friend at school asked to borrow the cassette so she could listen to it over a weekend.

Months later when she returned it, the tape inside the cassette was mangled, ruining certain tracks.  The cover and lyric booklet were missing.

I was let down.  It was one of the first lessons I learned about being careful when letting others borrow something that’s important to you.

I recently had another one of those times – but it was a bit more adult in circumstance.

Nearly four years ago now I was on the verge of breaking up with my then boyfriend, M.  I became friends with a male coworker who lived half a block away from me.  We starting doing things together M would not do with me — like running Cheesman Park, trying out new eats in the neighborhood and even occasionally making dinner together at his apartment.  A few times, he brought me to his church.  What I realize now is that it was inappropriate for me to be spending time like that with him while feeling so mixed up over M.  I justified each time we spent together by the fact that I was fighting with M and that we were “on a break” and then on and then off and then he hated me and then he loved me and then I hated him and then I didn’t.  It was very dramatic and exhausting and there was just very little right about our relationship.

I did end up officially breaking up with M, but not before I poured my heart out to my neighbor/coworker and loaned him a book that was very important to me.  It was not necessarily worth any money, but because of the book’s story, and the particular copy’s meaning to me.  He knew all this before I loaned it to him.

After a few weeks of spending time with him I realized I was wrong about his loyalty to me – as more and more women came out of the woodwork to warn me that he was a snake who disguised himself as a Jesus-loving, born-again-virgin Christian.  I was SICK over the stories I was hearing and so upset with myself from falling right into his sweet demeanor and soft attitude.  I used to give myself more credit for being cautious and thoughtful.  He even told me on my sofa one evening that if we got engaged he hoped we’d get married very quickly.  Less than a week later, he was not returning my calls.

Incredible guilt aside from my own faults those few months, the happiness I’ve found out of this bizarre and 90%-over relationship (I still work with him) is a good girlfriend, another victim (one…or maybe two girls in front of me?) in his very long and almost unbelievable line of untruths and string of vulnerable lady friends.  He got married the weekend before me in May and it was all I had in me not to contact his poor bride and tell her his hurtful ways.  She probably should know better, because her former roommate was one of the women he suctioned and then left hanging.  Perhaps he’s changed, but there’s always a little truth that lingers.  Perhaps he’s met his perfect match.

For years now, I have asked that he return the book I loaned him.  YEARS.  I have asked at least four times a year for three years now.  After his wedding, he moved a few blocks to a new apartment and must have physically touched my book to load it into a box with him to his new digs.  Still he did not return it.

Finally last Friday I wrote him an email and said I needed the book back.  Period.  I wanted it Monday.  No excuses.

He did deliver it to me this morning at my desk.

The NYC Subway papertag transfer I’d used as a bookmark the two times I read it was missing and a page was dog-eared.  (Who does that to someone else’s book?)  The paperback was a little worse for wear, but I’ve had it for a long time…and the copy itself has now had its own Denver adventure, much like its characters between the covers.

I’m thrilled this chapter is closed.

 

 

 

 

Blizzards. A Necessity this Summer.

I’m not sure how this happened, but late this afternoon I had my fifth (or possibly sixth) Dairy Queen Blizzard of the summer.  This time, I ordered a LARGE.

It’s a lie that I don’t know how this happened.  I’m going to blame it on the incredible heat that continues this week in Colorado.  DQ Blizzards are the only thing I want to eat.  Chocolate soft serve ice cream with Oreo cookies.

On all DQ locations nowadays there is a sign on the entrance that says to notify the person taking your order of any sort of allergy affecting you.

I am allergic to peanuts and peanut oil and I do not mind telling it on the mountain.

When I was thirteen and on vacation in Cape Cod with my family I ordered a Blizzard (predictably chocolate ice cream with Oreo cookies) and brought it back with me to our rental house.  It was a rainy day and my brother and our friends had rented Back to the Future 2.  I’d seen the first in the series and Back to the Future 3, but never 2.  So I was excited.  That is, until the previews were rolling and I shoveled a scoop of Blizzard into my mouth and started chomping on an actual peanut.  A full on, little salted, most dangerous nut…in my supposedly only chocolate and Oreo cookies treat.  It had apparently flown into the mix while the person making the treat scooped in Oreo crumbles to the cup.

The night continued with me breaking out into hives and having to go to the emergency room.  I literally did not see Back to the Future 2 until college.  Lame!

There is a DQ location on Colorado Boulevard that really takes my allergy seriously and keeps me coming back.  The past five (or six) times I’ve been there, they’ve opened a new package of Oreo cookies and sanitized the equipment used to make the Blizzard.  I’m sure this is common practice at DQ, but I feel better about it at this particular location than I do at others–especially any on Cape Cod.

Thank you from the bottom of my tummy, DQ on Colorado Boulevard.  Yikes from my hips.

Summer is off to a super warm bang here in the west.  I’m hopeful this Blizzard obsession will stop soon and I’ll be able to substitute an extra-large glass of ice water for that sweet, soft serve dessert.