Someday I’d like to own this
This is the Fujifilm x100 and it’s lovely. It looks old school, and I got to take a picture or two with one a few months ago, and I can’t get it out of my head.
It costs more than a month’s rent, and I have other debts to pay off, but this is a camera that I’d like to own one day.
Let me know if you see it for about half of what they’re asking.
Stranger things have happened!
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- Review: Fujifilm FinePix X10 (stuffmideast.com)
- Fujifilm X100 Black pictures and hands-on (pocket-lint.com)
- Hands-on with the X-Pro 1: Streamlined controls and bright lenses in the same stylish package (digitaltrends.com)
10 Questions that Create Success
In my day job, I subscribe to Inc’s online sales newsletter. It talks about all kinds of small business success stories — mainly in terms of hard sales or door-to-door campaigns.
But then, today, something else came along. Ten questions that create success. And it blew me away. The author says to think of these things every day, and that it’s okay when the answer is “not today” but they’ll improve your life if you think of them every day.
They’re worth reprinting here, just for reference. They’re already in my journal.
1. Have I made certain that those I love feel loved?
2. Have I done something today that improved the world?
3. Have I conditioned my body to be more strong flexible and resilient?
4. Have I reviewed and honed my plans for the future?
5. Have I acted in private with the same integrity I exhibit in public?
6. Have I avoided unkind words and deeds?
7. Have I accomplished something worthwhile?
8. Have I helped someone less fortunate?
9. Have I collected some wonderful memories?
10. Have I felt grateful for the incredible gift of being alive?
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- 10 Questions to ask oneself each day (weidivv.wordpress.com)
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Confession
It came up last night at dinner. A lovely friend came by, we ate dinner, drank Aperol cocktails, and finished with pumpkin ice cream. She’s been gone for a few months and it was great to catch up.
She’s going to visit her special someone the weekend before that random Tuesday in February. So we discussed Valentine’s day (and gay marriage and abortion and religion!).
She seemed like she was starting to apologize, “but Valentine’s Day is arbitrary” or something deep and intellectual, when I blurted:
“I love Valentine’s Day.” She laughed, wasn’t sure if I was joking, perhaps hoping I was. But the secret was out, so I continued. “I love red, pink and white. I love hearts. I love heart-shaped everything. The candy is the best. Seeing an aisle of red in grocery stores makes me happy.”
She laughed. “It’s so comforting to be around someone who isn’t ashamed to like this day.”
It definitely sucks that guys are forced to buy some stupid thing and that there’s some bar that inevitably will leave some guys sleeping on the couch because he didn’t get the not-so-subtle hints in the days/weeks leading up to the day, and some girl ends up sulking when, hey, honestly, this is the one night a year (a year!) that is supposed to be a simple equation of buy flowers/get laid.
Interesting side note: my birthday is precisely nine months after Valentine’s Day, give or take a few days. And you know what? I’ll never (EVER) ask, but I bet it’s not coincidence. It’s fun to remind other November birthdays of that fact, too, just to see them squirm. {Dad, thank goodness, hasn’t figured out how to leave a comment yet.}
ANYWAY, I just love it. Growing up, Mom always made sure that us girls got presents on Valentine’s Day. As a kid, it was exciting! and fun! and chocolate before school! but by the time I turned 13, I realized how special it was. Let’s just say I was a late bloomer, so throughout the “painful years” my mom was my only Valentine. To this day, she goes out of her way to let us know that she loves us. One year, we were informed that we’d gotten a cookie basket. Sure, we had to drive 10 miles to go get it, but it was an adventure that netted us both some heart-shaped cookies that said “I love you” on them. The next year, Mom bought us matching panini presses (or was that Easter?).
So that’s my confession. Valentine’s day is one of my most favorite holidays. Especially now that I’m a grown up and I work in a small office mostly filled with dudes, which means that there aren’t competing giant! bouquets! of flowers!
Let’s go back to elementary school, when the idea was egalitarian: show everyone in class how much you love them. Pick out the valentines that said something a little more special for that crush sitting across the room. Agonize over this decision. Realize that there are three or four of the special valentines, and no, that creep with the boogers doesn’t have one yet either, and panic. Somehow, in your ten-year-old head, understand that your crush won’t understand the significance, but the booger boy will. Stay oblivious to this life lesson for another decade or two.
And let’s just say that this is the day to love more. Thanksgiving episode two. There’s a lot of love in this world. Let’s be a part of it!
As for my friend and me, we agreed that it was a fun excuse to wear pink, or red, or white, unapologetically.
For those of you interested, I like the heart-shaped Sprees and the red and white Nerds best of all. Oh, and salted caramels. O’Malley’s Handmade Confections can’t be beat!
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Christmas gifts 2011
I want to remember what I gave in 2011. So here goes:
- To my sister: the materials to make her very first sewing project (thanks, Pinterest!), the advent calendar, and this quarterly surprise present thing
- To my dad: a painted canvas that says “happy when skies are gray” which is a line from one of the songs he used to sing me, every night
- To my boyfriend: a “perfect Portland day” which ended up being a bunch of gift certificates to fun places in Portl
and. The idea is that we’ll go to brunch at Tasty n’ Sons, then ride the tram up the hill, then go to Powell’s books, then to Pok Pok for dinner and then the Doug Fir for dessert, drinks, and hipster watching. - To my family and friends: way-too-salty salted caramels (my bad!), magnets and coasters. This was the fourth year of “Kathleen’s homemade Christmas” and I still love it. Every year, caramels will be included, but the other stuff is much more open for discussion, thought, contemplation, etc.
This was also the first year of the Kathleen Christmas letter, which I got a bit of feedback from, and none of it was negative, so I’ll continue that.
- I like the idea of sending non-perishables, because it significantly decreases the stress level of mailing things out. Caramels don’t go bad (especially when they’re essentially a salt lick), magnets are cute, and coasters were fun. Next year, I’ll still send Priority boxes, so if anyone has a particularly amazing idea, please let me know!
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Maybe a better name
The results of the last poll made me realize that more thinking is in order.
So, after several silly emails between my uncle and me, I have this:
Here’s the side view:
Handmade? Homemade? Hand crafted? Artisan?
Candies? Confections? Sweets?
I need help, people.
New Page
See up there, in the top right corner? There are a couple links, and one of them says “Amazon” — can I ask a favor?
If you use Amazon to buy things (and if you don’t, kudos to you!) can you just click through that page when you start shopping?
That would be great. Occasionally I’ll post reviews on things that I’ve purchased from Amazon. But I get a tiny percentage if you click through my page. So, if you buy a TV on Amazon, I’ll be sure to share the love.
Thanks, friends!
Related articles
- Amazon Kindles: Easy Come, Easy Go – New York Times (blog) (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
- 2012 Prediction No. 8: Amazon.com Becomes an Online Advertising Player (forbes.com)





