A Day of Indoors

Question: What does one do when it’s so blazin’ hot outside that the idea of being anywhere but directly in front of the AC makes you a lil batty???

Humidity tastes awful!!!!!

Answer: You make a day out of fun indoorsy activities!

Activity #1: Circuit Training with a Friend

Knowing that running outside, or any other manually laborious activity would NOT be happening, I decided to switch up the ol’ workout routine, and grab a buddy: Dear Hubby.

The Plan:

Circuit A: 15 minutes – Person A runs/jogs/walks on the treadmill; Person B warmups and does the Jackie Warner Abs circuit & then switch!

Circuit B: 15 minutes – Person A runs/jogs/walks on the treadmill; Person B completes Jackie Warner Upper Body circuit – SWITCH!

Circuit C: 15 minutes – Person A runs/jobs/walks on the treadmill; Person B completes Jackie Warner Lower Body circuit – SWITCH!

WHAT A SWEAT HOG WORKOUT!!!

You can see the two peaks on the chart are from the two points in which I started back up on the treadmill.  I was “Person B” and started out with the JW DVD, and I had to cut my time short on the last circuit because my legs were so exhausted!  But overall I was very pleased with how effective this switch up was.

Activity #2: Bowling!

OMG I had forgotten how much I enjoy bowling, and discovered that the love affair not only is still on, but rejuvenated since Michigan has gone to a smoke-free policy for public buildings.  Lungs, meet fresh air and lane wax.

Even though this was part II of our lovely indoorsy day, I brought my game face.

Ummmm, say huh?!?!?

Activity #3: Sports Cards

My parents told us about a sports card shop in the same town where the bowling alley was, and to console Dear Hubby’s bruised ego after losing to his wife at bowling, twice, we made a stop in at Extra Innings in Mason, MI.

Usually, we do our cards bidness in a store called Legends, but it’s always good to have options for when you’re in different parts of town.  A very delightful and KNOWLEDGABLE man named Rick runs Extra Innings, and we stayed well over an hour just shooting the sporting news breeze with him.  With a box of 2011 Panini Threads football cards in hand, we made our trip home and enjoyed the remainder of our evening like this:

Was our day of indoorsy activities successful?  I’d say so!

Falling Back Into Place

Happy Monday, All!

I can safely say that I will be glad to put as much time and space between myself and an airplane.  Our flights were smooth, just too many in a 24 hour period.

Flying is for the birds.

What a fantastic way to begin the week: waking up in your childhood-ish bedroom, drinking coffee before the sunrises, and getting in a powerful 6 mile run!

You’ll have to excuse me for a lack of photos; I’ve been taking in all the new stimuli of being back at home in Michigan.  The thought keeps running through my head, “Oh man, I should take a photo of/this belongs in my blog, but I Can’t.Be.Stopped.Must.Eat.More.Fresh.Produce.”  I’m sure you’ll forgive me as time goes by and I am uploading more pictures of mundane food items than the author of 1001 Recipes for Saltines and White Bread.  Please don’t take my cookbook idea from me.

Anyways, what I do have for you is a list of all the wonderful things I’ve been able to experience since returning to Michigan that the average person would rather shove off onto someone else’s shoulders:

  • Rode in a car that was traveling over 30mph AND for over a 5 minute period of time;
  • Answered my cell phone and responded to text messages;
  • Opened and recycled the cardboard from some packages that I received in the mail that I did NOT ship from Alaska;
(My Boilermaker Road Race training shirt arrived in the mail.  Owning the race t-shirt is half the battle of any race.)
  • Made my own coffee this morning, and drank it while watching the local news;
  • Wrote down and purchased all the items on a grocery list in quantities that should last me through the week and not the next month and a half +;
  • Flipped through some curriculum books that I ordered in the Spring:
  • Commented on the price of gas as being “cheap;”
  • Unpacked four suitcases worth of clothing and put 3.5 of the contents into “Winter Clothes” storage;
  • Scanned the isles of a bookstore (or the book section of a super store…whatevs)
  • Made plans to get a pedicure tomorrow afternoon
My thoughts exactly!

Ah, such is the life of a rebel gypsy like me.

Oh!  And since the name of this blog is Fancy OATMEAL, I thought I should share with you a great discovery that I made when looking for a quick, easy breakfast for the bonus morning we spent on the island.

It’s a new line of Quaker Oatmeal called Real Medleys.  I chose the Summer Berry Oatmeal flavor:

I was a little hesitant to purchase a pre-flavored oatmeal, but since it was only going to be one morning without my trusty traditional flare, I decided to give it a shot.  I sure am glad that I did.  It was much easier than adding in my own ingredients; you just add boiling water and in 1,2,3 you’ve got breakfast!

The taste wasn’t overly sweet, and there was no after-taste like you get with some packaged oatmeal, and the nutritional information was pretty pleasing as well:

Quaker offers three more flavors that you might enjoy:

 

I am in no way being compensated for my opinion by Quaker or any other company.  However, I am not too proud to take a free sample or two as a thank you for spreading the word.

Five Things Friday Plus One

Oh Friday, you stroll back into my life like a smooth operator.

As is my life lately, this post encompasses absolutely no sense of order or reason, so I shall just begin.

1.  With the grace of God, a lot of praying, and a very welcomed offer, Dear Hubby and I have sold our car.  Our little Ford Focus has served us well both on St. Paul Island and in Michigan.  In the land of full-sized, diesel fueled 4X4s, our little car may have developed a slight Napoleon Complex.

The off-roading ability of a compact car certainly did give us a few fits when the harsh winds blew road-blocking snow drifts, but it was a mobile roof over our heads.

2.  Last night I went for a four-mile run.  I was planning on counting Thursday as my Rest Day of the week, but when my legs were itchin’ to be let loose, you gotta give the ladies what they want.

3.  I updated my Netflix DVD catalog, and changed over our mailing address from Alaska to Michigan.  I didn’t realize until after I was done and preparing this blog entry that I might be slightly preoccupied with handsome leading men.

 4.  Speaking of making cinematheque choices based exclusively on eye candy, I also added the first season of “the Vampire Diaries” to our Netflix list.

I have no idea what this show is about: reflective vampires?!?!

Since so much hype has been surrounding the potential actors who would play Christian Grey in a movie version of The Fifty Shades of Grey, and Ian Somerhalder’s name keeps popping up, I found it to be my responsibility and civic duty to be as knowledgeable of the candidates as possible.

Hair worthy of running an exasperated hand through? CHECK!

Piercing eyes? CHECK!

Twitchy palm? CHECK!

5.  May Reading Challenge Update!

I have set a goal for myself to read at least five novels in the month of May, and like my running mileage goal, I don’t think I’ll have any problem reaching it.  So far I have read the final two installments in the Fifty Shades series, Insurgent, and as of yesterday, The Fault in Our Stars.  I have two titles left to read, The Hate List and I,Iago, and because I was so moved by the writing style of John Green in The Fault in Our Stars, I decided to break out of my challenge boundaries and begin another Green title, Looking for Alaska.

From School Library Journal

Grade 9 Up – Sixteen-year-old Miles Halter’s adolescence has been one long nonevent – no challenge, no girls, no mischief, and no real friends. Seeking what Rabelais called the “Great Perhaps,” he leaves Florida for a boarding school in Birmingham, AL. His roommate, Chip, is a dirt-poor genius scholarship student with a Napoleon complex who lives to one-up the school’s rich preppies. Chip’s best friend is Alaska Young, with whom Miles and every other male in her orbit falls instantly in love. She is literate, articulate, and beautiful, and she exhibits a reckless combination of adventurous and self-destructive behavior. She and Chip teach Miles to drink, smoke, and plot elaborate pranks. Alaska’s story unfolds in all-night bull sessions, and the depth of her unhappiness becomes obvious. Green’s dialogue is crisp, especially between Miles and Chip. His descriptions and Miles’s inner monologues can be philosophically dense, but are well within the comprehension of sensitive teen readers. The chapters of the novel are headed by a number of days “before” and “after” what readers surmise is Alaska’s suicide. These placeholders sustain the mood of possibility and foreboding, and the story moves methodically to its ambiguous climax. The language and sexual situations are aptly and realistically drawn, but sophisticated in nature. Miles’s narration is alive with sweet, self-deprecating humor, and his obvious struggle to tell the story truthfully adds to his believability. Like Phineas in John Knowles’s A Separate Peace(S & S, 1960), Green draws Alaska so lovingly, in self-loathing darkness as well as energetic light, that readers mourn her loss along with her friends. - Johanna Lewis, New York Public Library

While I was looking for a photo of the cover of the novel, I came across a link that indicated that there is a film version of Miles Halter’s story.  It won’t be out until 2013, but I’m always excited when I’m on the bandwagon for a book-turned-movie LONG before the film is released.  One of the few times I feel part of the popular crowd.

Whatever.

6.  A bonus for us all!

Without going into any detail whatsoever, I just wanted to let you all know that I have my first in-person job interview in over four years scheduled.  Based upon on my present People Skills, I need to practice making appropriate, at-work small talk.