Friday, June 28, 2013

Guess what day it is?

This commercial is one of my current favorites, along with Snuffy the Seal.


So when my boss suggested we invite over the colleagues we actually like (there aren't many of them) for happy hour on my last day here, I asked if I could make the invitation. Here's how I spent an hour of paid working time today:

OK, it wasn't really an hour. More like 8-10 minutes.

Juls and I have long been talking about starting our own event planning business someday. She's an excellent chef and party planner, I'm getting lots of experience with planning her shower, and I'm pretty awesome at making marketing materials. So needless to say, this WILL be going in our portfolio.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Successful Saturday

I'd say yesterday was pretty successful. I woke up at 6 a.m., was on the road by 7:30 a.m., and in Woburn looking at a condo at 9 a.m. The condo is owned by a guy named Frank. He's 33, works in marketing, and is renting out one of the bedrooms. The house is literally 1.8 miles from Julia and Donny. He's cool with Rags, and since he works out of the house most days, he even said he'd be happy to let Rags out when I'm at work all day. The condo is immaculate - he keeps it really clean and is surprisingly good at decorating for a guy. There are three levels - upstairs where the bedrooms and a full bath are, downstairs where the living room, kitchen, dining room, and a half bathroom are, and a fully finished basement where the washer and dryer are. The yard is enormous and since this is part of a condo association, they take care of all the maintenance, including snow removal. Score!

After visiting the Woburn condo, we went in search of bridesmaid dresses. After trying on probably two dozen dresses, one big disappointment when the dress we all fell in love with turned out to be discontinued and thus not available, we finally said yes to a dress. It was actually not at all what we thought we wanted but Juls loves it and it looks great on our bodies and - the most important part - it comes in the colors Juls wants! We got it at Bella Bridesmaid on Newbury Street in Boston. I can't say enough about Britt, the owner. She didn't mind that we were late, sweaty, and smelly. The dress we chose was her idea, and we are so grateful that she thought to bring it out.

We need to order (i.e., pay for) the dresses by July 15 in order to have them by the end of November. Britt gave us a 10% discount so that helped a lot. Now we need to figure out how to "dress them up." The dress is elegant as is, made from chiffon, but Juls wants some sparkle so we'll either need to add a belt or just some beading. That's the fun part!

After a short picnic on Boston Common, we went and looked at another potential place for me. The apartment was cute but small and in a really rough-looking part of Boston known as Mission Hill, but it was really close to Roxbury. And my potential roommate admitted she smoked pot and that her boyfriend was "around a lot." No thanks.

In the car on the way home, my mind was made up. I talked to both of my parents and made my final decision. The only negative is that the condo isn't available until August 1 (his current roommate is a 22-year-old girl who is moving out to "grow up and be on her own") but my job starts July 15. Julia and Donny have graciously offered me "my bedroom" in their house for those two weeks. This means I can't bring Rags - he's a jerk to Buster - but it will give me flexibility with my schedule so I can get adjusted at work, go out for drinks afterward, and not worry about rushing home to Rags. I'll come back to Longmeadow on the weekends to spend time with him.

So, without further ado, here's my new home.

Exterior:
   
Upstairs:
   


Downstairs:

Basement:

Friday, June 21, 2013

New Eyes, New Job, New City, New Life

Thanks to my best friend for the title above. I texted her that everything was happening so fast and she responded the way she always does - with positivity. Amen.

My surgeon was able to rearrange his schedule (i.e., postpone someone else's surgery) and fit me in on July 2. The surgery is - AGAIN DANG IT - an afternoon surgery, which means no food after midnight  until after the surgery. That's a long time without food or water. My surgery is at 12:45 p.m. but I have to be at the hospital at 11:15 a.m. Last surgery, I spent the morning baking four dozen pumpkin muffins so the family and I at least had breakfast for the next week. Unfortunately I was too sick to enjoy them before they went bad, but it kept me busy that morning instead of thinking about how hungry I was. You'd think it made my hunger worse but for me, baking isn't about eating. It's about the process.

So anyway, July 2 is perfect. It's a Tuesday. I can work in the morning. I'm told I can probably work the next day, but the president of the college is so awesome that she is letting us all go home at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, July 3. Obviously July 4 is a holiday, and since half of the employees are probably already planning to take Friday off, she's decided to close to college and let us have a nice long weekend. A four-and-a-half day weekend, to be exact. I was going to request Friday off since Saturday is the bridal shower, but now I don't have to.

Yes, I will be bruised and swollen for Julia's shower which is exactly what I was trying to avoid - we have almost no good pictures together from the last year - but it's an excuse to buy enormous Jackie O sunglasses instead of my usual fake Ray-Bans. And hopefully by then I won't need any more percocet and enjoy plenty of sangria.

*Update: I got this great response from a woman in my online Graves' support group.
Hi!  Congratulations on your new job!  In my experience, eyelid retraction repair recovery was a piece of cake compared to OD recovery.  I only had light sedation and local anesthetic during the procedure because they needed me to be able to sit up and open my eyes to help them gauge the correct height of the lids. 30 minutes after the procedure I was completely coherent and able to walk out of the hospital.  I had some mild pain that day, but by the next day was completely pain free and able to pretty much go about my normal routine-Of course with big dark glasses on when I left the house! If I remember correctly there was no bending below the waist or lifting anything heavy for the first week. I was using ice packs frequently and the majority of the swelling and bruising went away in 4 or 5 days. I would say it took a full 10 days for all of the bruising to diminish.  I think you will still be able to throw your friend a fabulous shower, you may just need a little extra make up and to wear glasses depending on the level of bruising you still have.I'm so glad you will be able to put TED behind you soon!  I'm sure everything will go great with your surgery!  Let us know.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Surgery #2 is a Go

It's just five days shy of the nine month mark since my bilateral orbital decompression and today I saw my surgeon to discuss the next step: lowering my upper eyelids. Most people with moderate to severe thyroid eye disease (mine was moderate) need one to three surgeries to correct the damage, which takes anywhere from one to two years to fully flare up and fully calm down. I got lucky in that mine only flared for a few months and I was able to have surgery #1 this past September. Had I woken up with double vision, it would've meant six months on disability, unable to drive or work until I was recovered enough for surgery #2 - strabismus surgery to correct the double vision. Praise cheez-its, I woke up with single vision and have no complications from surgery #1 aside from the numbness on my right cheek. That's where surgeon #1 (oculofacial surgeon/Dr. C) spent the bulk of the three-hour surgery digging around to create more room for my right eye. Aside from that, I feel great.

So today I was cleared for surgery #2 (or #3 for those unlucky ones who develop double vision) - eyelid lowering, or mullerectomy. Because my eyes bulged out so much for so long, my upper eyelids have permanently retracted. So although my eyeballs no longer bulge thanks to a successful surgery #1, my upper eyelids are stuck up there and so I always look surprised.

This surgery is not cosmetic, and there are no out-of-pocket costs to me. Except my deductible. Unfortunately, because my thyroid was so unstable this past year, I had to wait longer than expected for surgery #2 and my health insurance plan restarts July 1, meaning I will be on the hook for the first $1,000. My orbital decompression was in the $20,000 neighborhood and I paid not a dime since I met last year's deductible on exactly July 7 when I had a $5,000 MRI of my orbit (head/eye area) in preparation for surgery #1.

Here's the snafu: my last day of work is July 10. My current health insurance plan will be canceled at 11:59 p.m. that night. My new insurance won't pick up until my first day of work, July 15 and even when it does, it's only going to cover physicians out in the Boston area. My surgeon has a colleague he recommends out there, but Dr. C has been so great. I started seeing him in March 2012 and literally put my life in his hands back in September with this major surgery that could have left me cross-eyed or blind. I want him to perform surgery #2. He agrees.

So, his surgical coordinator is going to see if there's any way to fit me in between now and my last day on the books at my current job. I have plenty of sick time left (a week and and some change) so that's not an issue. I mean, I really don't want to miss much work since I only have another three weeks left but I have to do what's best for me.

The procedure and recovery will be much less invasive and involved than surgery #1 was, but Dr. C cautioned me that I will probably look just at bruised and battered due to my fair skin and ease of bruising. We even discussed my crazy Niacin reactions and he said it's totally normal for someone as fair as me to continue to have the sunburn-like reaction after two+ months on the drug.

There's a very good possibility I will show up to my first day of work in sunglasses, and not want to take them off. However, my first day is actually orientation and is for every new hospital employee, resident, intern, etc. So the physicians will probably love asking about my stitches and bruises. Tuesday is my actual first day of work, and I wasn't going to tell them anything about Graves' until I had to, and it's looking like I'm going to have to. A warning email the day before might be in order so they don't think I got mugged on the T on my way into the office. Or should I go with that story...?

Anyway, I'm really hoping I can schedule the surgery for my last week of work so I don't have to show up to the bridal shower I'm hosting with a swollen face and sunglasses even if it rains and we move inside. However, I have been waiting for surgery #2 for about eight-and-a-half months so whenever they can make time for me, I'll take it. As long as I'm able to get everything ready the days before and set up that morning, and can enjoy myself, I really don't care about being bruised and swollen.

In case the surgery is scheduled sooner, I'm started my surgery prep today, which basically just means eating healthy, exercising a little extra, and no ibuprofen. You're supposed to stop ibuprofen, aspirin, or any other blood thinners 10 days before surgery. I don't take the latter two, so I'm good. I decided last week I wasn't drinking this week because I had been having a glass or two every night with dinner and then sleeping like crap when normally I sleep like a baby. I'm sure new job stress/anxiety has more to do with it than anything, but I also wanted to save that $20 instead of spending it on wine, so alas I am wine-free this week and might as well continue until after the surgery.

By the way, Twiggy over at Quarterlife Ramblings had her eyelids lowered back in April and everything went swimmingly. I think she said it best when she said, "I no longer look like I've permanently seen a ghost."

Oh, and I totally said I was going to exercise extra starting today but I have been so dang tired lately (thanks Bruins) so it's bedtime. I'll start tomorrow.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Potato Chip Aficionado

I love salty foods, especially potato chips and french fries. The best chips I've ever had were from a now-closed restaurant on Main Street in downtown Springfield, MA. Sean and I met for lunch once when I worked downtown, and this place made their own potato chips. It was the first time I had eaten a kettle chip, and I was hooked.

Now, let me say that potato chips aren't part of my regular diet. They are fun to munch on at parties but I really only buy them in the summer to go with a hot dog or burger on the grill.

My favorite is almost always a cracked black pepper kettle chip. Several brands make them. Some are better than others. I also love a good sour cream and onion kettle chip. I'm not interested in those weird flavors like chicken, thai food, etc. I hate BBQ-flavored anything, and buffalo chips are just weird.

Recently, I shopped at a different grocery store than my usual, and they did not have my favorite brand of kettle chips. But then I spotted a bag of Utz Mystic Dark Russet chips. They don't say "kettle" but the bag screamed my name and the rest is history.

OH. MY. GOD. Oh my god you guys, these are so dang good. Like my fries, I like my chips crunchy, crispy, and dark.
It gets better. The chips contain no preservatives or hydrogenated fats. Just potatoes, peanut oil and salt. Go buy yourself a bag. You'll thank me later. Or not, when you reach in and feel the bottom of the bag and realized you just ate the entire bag in one sitting. They're that good.

Disclaimer: This blog receives no payment or other compensation for reviews of products or services.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Don't Let Me Near Your Car

At work, we joke that we our office (which is really an old house) might have been built on some old burial ground because we have the weirdest injuries and illnesses. Out of the four (now five) of us, I probably contribute about 75% of those injuries and illnesses. For a while, one of my co-workers seemed totally safe from the office curse but alas, she got sick a few weeks ago. It almost comforted her knowing she wasn't the radioactive one making the rest of us sick.

Anyway, I'm pretty sure I have some sort of evil cloud hanging over me when it comes to vehicles. I've had a lot of car problems in the past. My first car was a 1995 Jeep Cherokee Laredo. It was the family vehicle that got passed down to me when I got my license. This car was quirky. By 2001, you could take the keys out of the ignition...while driving! We used to do this on the highway and wave them to passing cars and really freak  people out. By the summer of 2002, the AC went but I had power windows so I toughed it out. When the heat finally went during the winter of my freshman year of college, we knew we had to do something.

My parents helped me buy a red 1997 Chevrolet Cavalier. I thought it was so badass. It was a coupe.
Then, one bright sunny day in the summer before my senior year of college, I was driving back to my apartment from the mall. I don't know what happened (and I'm pretty sure to this day my parents think I'm lying) but the next thing I knew I was waking up in a LOT of pain in the driver's seat. The car in front of me - an Audi - had slowed to turn and apparently I did not. I plowed into the back of him going ~40mph. His car had some dents and scratches. Mine was totaled. The airbag deployed and since my legs are so short and I sit so close to the steering wheel, the airbag burned all the skin off my chin and part of my forearm. My sunroof shattered into the car but fortunately I was not cut. I called 911 and an ambulance came that I refused to ride in. I think one or both of my parents came and brought me to my apartment, where they proceeded to yell at me.

Insurance covered the cost of the car, so naturally I got a 1999 Chevrolet Cavalier despite learning firsthand that Cavaliers really are tin cans. It was also a coupe, but was white and looked a little more sporty. Her name was "Callie."

Over Thanksgiving weekend in 2005, my then-boyfriend and I were going somewhere on the highway. I forget. Fortunately he was driving because all of a sudden something felt very wrong and he lost control of the car. He maneuvered us over to the breakdown lane where we discovered the wheel had broken. Or the axle, or something. My dad had taken my car somewhere the previous week for I think a tire rotation, and apparently the mechanic did not screw the lugnuts back on tight. Brian made the grave mistake of blaming my dad when he came to rescue us, and any iota of warmth my dad had come to feel for him in the previous four years of us dating was quickly out of the window.
Anyway, my car suvrived the trauma. In November 2006, I was on my way to pick up the most important package of my life thus far. Hint:
I'm less than two minutes from the woman's house when I hear this horribly loud thunk and my car stops. It was cold, my dad had to come rescue me (story of my life) and take me to pick up Rags. Actually, I drove him back to work and then borrowed his huge Suburban to go pick up Rags. I remember this distinctly because I had a little carrier for him that he did not like, and so my career as a pushover began when he started crying and I pulled over to free him. I took him to Petco (no one told me you can't take 8-week-old puppies, who are not fully vaccinated, to a pet store) and he threw up all over a toy, so I was forced to buy it. And we've been the happiest little family ever since.

My Cavalier, not so much. I had blown the engine by not checking the oil. It was bone dry. It was a very expensive repair.

The Cavalier caused me problems in Florida. It managed to get five of us to and from Jacksonville for the 2007 Florida-Georgia game, including the parking lot called I-10. Traffic was so bad that everyone was getting out of their cars to set up tailgates. We set up our chairs, unloaded the cooler, and tossed a football around for a few hours.
But "Callie" was not pleased. She was in the shop on a regular basis. I was planning to drive home for a couple weeks while my then-boyfriend was in Spain and all my friends were interning around the country while I was stuck interning in Gainesville. The AC went, and I needed all new brakes, so my parents told me to repair the bare minimum and get myself and Rags safely home. We did, with the windows down from Florida to Atlanta to the Blue Ridge Mountains and then to Massachusetts. It was brutal. Once I got home, my dad took the Cavalier off my hands (and still drives it today) and I got a 1999 Nissan Maxima.

The Maxima was the luxury edition, but it was also 9 years old. I forget where the problems began, but I had a rusted out brake line, all sorts of leaks, brake problems. I have no good pictures of it, but this one accurately depicts my experiences with "Maggie."
When my dad came to stay with me for a week in November 2011, he took it and got a bunch of repairs. A month later, I realized how much money this car was sucking out of me and could die at any moment, and went and took out a car loan on a 2003 Toyota Corolla.
I LOVE my Corolla. I've had no problems aside from a weird defect where when the temperature outside falls below 20, the headlights turn themselves on, draining the battery. It took a while to figure out what was happening and resulted in a new (unnecessary) battery and several AAA calls, but then I found this Technical Service Bulletin. Instead of spending a bunch of money for something that was only going to happen a few times a year, we figured out a workaround - set the high beams on when turning off the car. The high beams don't actually stay on once the car is off, but since they are switched to the on position, the headlights wouldn't turn themselves on when it got cold. This works, although I have forgotten about it till now and I'm sure I will learn the hard way the first time it gets really cold next year.

Then, this past Saturday, I was going to scout out some tag sales (yard or garage sales for you non-New Englanders) to find myself a dresser for my soon-to-be-new Boston apartment. My car hesitated when I started it. I called my Dad outside to see if he thought it was serious. He waddled out, still in a lot of pain from Friday's hernia surgery, and said it was probably wet from the 3" of rain we'd have during the week. Makes sense. My car once stalled when I drove quickly through a big puddle that splashed onto my hood so clearly she is delicate.

I still had a bad feeling about my car, so when I went to tag sales around town, I left my car running the whole time. It was probably 45 minutes. Then I forgot and parked at Home Depot and JoAnn Fabrics while I stocked up on bridal shower supplies. When I went out to my car, it was totally dead. Would not even turn over, but I had lights and radio and even enough juice to charge my phone and call my still-recovering dad. He came down, we tried unsuccessfully to jump the battery, tested it and were told it was fine, had the AAA man knock it with a huge pipe while I pulled a muscle turning the key back and forth, and finally conceded it was a bad starter.
$360 later...good as new. Except that was supposed to go toward my new wardrobe for work. And the bridal shower. And a deposit on an apartment. I almost threw up when I heard the total. On that note, I've decided to teach myself (or rather, ask my dad when he's feeling better) how to change my own oil.  More on that experience later.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Boston, You're My Home

Well, almost. For those of you who know me personally, you know that last week I accepted a position at a Boston hospital. This has been my dream for a long time, pretty much ever since I finished grad school at UF, but even before that I always knew I wanted to settle down in Boston. When I took my current job, a big reason was to get me from Florida back to Massachusetts. My family and closest friends knew I considered it a stepping stone to get to my ultimate goal of doing PR for a Boston-area hospital.

My dream has finally come true. I will be doing media relations for a large Boston cancer hospital and their official charity. I started interviewing for the position in May, and accepted an offer on Wednesday. I start July 15, which means my last day at my current job will be July 10 so I can have a few days to wrap up my life in western Massachusetts, move and settle in.

I still haven't found a place to live yet. It was such a crazy week that by this weekend, I was physically and emotionally exhausted. I have spent hours looking online, calling and emailing about possible apartments, and even Skyping with a potential roommate. I'm going to be in the city this Saturday to try on bridesmaid dresses for Julia's wedding, but I have crack of dawn and late afternoon appointments to see a few places. One is a room in a 2br, 1ba apartment in a Mission Hill house with a girl in her mid 20s. The other is a room in 3br, 1.5ba condo in Woburn (yes, where my best friend Julia lives - right around the corner actually!) with a professional male in his early 30s. And then there's a potential room in a 5ba, 2ba apartment in Brighton. One of the roommates is a friend of a friend, but four girls is a lot of estrogen. I think Rags needs somewhere really mellow and quiet, because that's what we had when we lived alone in Florida and he was so well-behaved. His crankiness is either due to his age (he's almost 8) or - the more likely culprit - living with two male adults and another dog, so he really never has any personal space or down time. I think one roommate would be ideal, and no other pets.

Actually, living alone would be ideal but since I am working for a nonprofit and have not much in the way of savings, a roommate is a must at first. I'd also rather bunk up with someone before signing away my life on a year's lease when I may hate the person, the neighborhood, etc.

Julia has extended "my bedroom" to me in the event that July 15 arrives and I still don't have a place to live. Or if I find a place that isn't immediately available. The Mission Hill apartment is available before I am (July 1) and the Woburn condo is available Aug. 1, so either of those would work out.

Money was actually the only thing that caused me to hesitate on accepting the offer right away. I negotiated my salary for the first time and am happy with the offer, but then I started thinking about rent and buying a new wardrobe (they wear suits to work every day, it's business casual at the college until summer and then it's just summer casual - I don't own suits) and I started to freak out. My best guy friend Sean said, "You'd be doing something you enjoy and you'd be near people you like to spend time with, and I think that adds immeasurably to your happiness." He was right. At that point, my mind was made up.

It's no secret to most that I have been miserable at my job. I like my officemates, but people outside of our department are downright nasty. Working in higher education without a doctorate often means being looked down upon, and for people with as much experience as we have, that's just not OK. I have been made to cry in meetings, referred to as a line item on someone's budget, been told I have no experience, been embarrassed by a faculty member in front of a reporter for no reason other than said faculty member's power trip...it's just been too much. And also, I miss healthcare. Working in sports made me sure I didn't want to work in sports. Working in higher ed made me sure I don't want to work in higher ed. Working in an agency made me sure I didn't want to work in an agency. I have yet to deal with the corporate bs, but I'm pretty sure I wouldn't like it. Healthcare is where I'm meant to be.

I also don't love western Massachusetts. Nor do I love admitting that at 28, I live with my dad and brother. In my defense, I had two weeks to quit my job and move from Florida to Massachusetts to start my current job, so of course I just moved back home. And then, when I was ready to get my own place, I was scheduled for major surgery that could have very well left me on disability from work for six months or longer, and even if it didn't, I was going to need round-the-clock care for a week or two while recovering. So I stayed. And then I started seriously applying for jobs in Boston and knew it would be silly to move out during that process when I could be saving.

Except it all happened much more quickly than I was expecting and I didn't really get to save. Four weeks from today, I will be at my first day at my new job. My new office is not in the hospital (boo), but it's directly across the street from the Yawkey Way entrance to Fenway (um, awesome!).

I'm trying to be positive today, so I'll save my recent car troubles for another post, and also until I know how much the repairs are going to set me back. Because I don't want to think about until I have to.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Hello Stranger

So, I've been terrible about posting lately. I've been so busy that I honestly forgot I even had a blog for a little while.

Let's see, where shall we begin?

The most exciting news on the health front is that my thyroid has been consistently on good behavior since March. And and and and! My cholesterol is finally on the way down! It's still far from ideal, but it's getting a lot better. I still have the flushing reaction to the niacin, but I got smart and now take it just as I'm about to fall asleep, so most nights I'm already asleep before the reaction happens so I don't notice it.



I had a successful trip to Florida in mid-May. Lauren and Keith got married, so I took Thursday-Monday for myself. Of course, I'm still paying for all my expenses but it was so good for my mental health. I got to catch up with my former co-workers, visit with friends, work on my tan, cheer on my Bruins with plenty of Boston fans and transplants, and of course, see one of my favorite girls tie to the knot. Proof I was there:


I missed Rags a LOT, and it was the longest we'd been apart since 2008. I kissed him goodbye before I went to work on Wednesday morning and didn't see him again until I got home from work on Tuesday evening. Now, he look like an ewok and spent all week and weekend sweating and panting because I'm a horrible dog mother and haven't had him groomed in months. In my defense, his haircuts cost three times what mine do, so I do try to get as much mileage out of each one as I can. Then, when I finally returned from Florida and realized how badly he needed a haircut, the mobile grooming van we use crashed and was out of service for several weeks. We finally have an appointment this evening, so he will be recognizable again in about nine hours.

While in Florida, I noticed a giant bruise on my foot. I've noticed the same bruises on both feet before, maybe about six weeks earlier. I had gone out the night before and assumed I tripped or danced too hard or something. But this same exact bruise was back, but only on one foot. When I touched it, it was excruciating but also not really a bruise. It was some sort of mass that moved when I pushed on it. I got it in my head that it was a blood clot, and spent the next few days worrying about it. When it came time to fly home on Monday, I was in pure panic mode. I knew flying with a blood clot could turn into DVT which could kill me. Normally a cool, calm, collected traveler, I took my window seat at the last possible second before they closed the cabin door, and kept my foot/leg in motion for the entire three-hour flight to JFK. My chest was tight and painful, my heart was racing, and I was shivering yet sweating. I now understand what it's like to have a panic attack. I had a quick layover then a puddle jumper to Logan, where Juls picked me up and I could finally relax with a glass of wine.

I went to the doctor the next day, and she confirmed it was in fact a blood clot–actually a superficial thrombophlebitis. She said to take ibuprofen three times a day for a week (normally longer but with my ulcer history, that's the last thing I need) and keep it elevated when at rest but to stay active. That sounds like great advice, except it became so painful and swollen that I could no longer wear a shoe that touched the top of my foot. I was walking Rags two days later in the rain, and my foot hurt so dang bad that I had to take off my sneaker and walk the rest of the way barefoot in the rain, on pavement. The pain comes in waves and spurts, so I finally got an ultrasound on it Friday to ensure it wasn't moving or enlarging. Not at all shocking given my health history, the tech could not find the clot at all. She could clearly see how dark and swollen that part of foot was, and noticed how I flinched when she touched it, but it was now 4:30 p.m. on a Friday and I was told the doctor would review the report and call me Monday. It's Tuesday. Time to figure this foot out. Because my workout routine has taken a serious hit due to fact and cannot wear a shoe.

In other news, I am officially the 2013-2014 Junior League of Greater Springfield, MA Vice President of Membership. I'm busy planning summer socials, recruitment events, and trying to form our new member class for the fall.

I'm also busy planning Julia's bridal shower. I've been a maid of honor in a wedding before, but it was my cousin's wedding while I was in grad school at University of Florida, so I literally came up the day before the wedding and left right after the reception. My cousin and I haven't been close since we were little, so it was a nice honor but I told her up front I couldn't afford to throw her a shower or do any of the traditional bridesmaid things since I was busy with grad school 1,500 miles away. Now I get to redeem myself! I've received compliments on the invitations, and have been spending a lot of time talking to Julia's mom about ideas, since she's co-hosting with me. We're having it at a family friend's new home in a few weeks, and I just can't wait for everyone to RSVP so we can start really getting down to the nitty gritty details. The theme is a garden party, and we're using the three colors of our bridesmaid dresses–mint, pale blue, and, depending on who you ask or what you're buying, rosemary/aqua/teal, as seen below.


I'll do a full post of everything we make for the shower afterward, but the large pots will be for utensils, and the small ones will have a tiny foam ball that a wood skewer will stick into. I'll then affix food placards to the skewer. It'll look like a doily or flower, keeping with the garden shower and antique wedding theme.