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"And this is my prayer, that your love may overflow more and more with knowledge and full insight to help you determine what is best, so that in the day of Christ you may be pure and blameless, having produced the harvest of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ for the glory and praise of God." -- Philippians 1:9-11

Monday, January 30, 2012

Skiing!

There’s been quite a bit that I want to write about, but that darn organic chemistry is eating all my time.  Well, that and playing.  I make sure I play a fair amount of every week.  The last two weekends I’ve gone skiing.  Last weekend I went to Pat’s Peak in New Hampshire with Youth Enrichment Services.  It was volunteer training weekend and they taught me how to teach kids how to ski.  The second day of training I taught an 8-year-old girl who had never skied before, she was adorable!  I had a great time and am looking forward to going on more trips with them (also I met a bunch of really cool people). 

This weekend I went to Cannon Mountain (also in New Hampshire) with my roommates and some other friends.  We drove two and a half hours up Friday night, rented a cabin, skied Saturday and Sunday, and came back to Boston Sunday evening.  Here are some pictures from our adventure!








Sunday, January 29, 2012

SASS#1

So I had this awesome idea of an “Awesome Sandwich.”  Basically it’s like a compliment sandwich, but with awesome things.  So you take your day, or week, or year, or whatever, and make a list of all the Awesome things that happened during that time frame.  Then you list the same number of Notsome things, and then top the sandwich off with one more list of Awesome.  I thought of this as I wrote a letter to my dear friend Benjamin, and then thought that it would be a great idea for a weekly blog post.  I decided that Sunday would be the best day for this, because I generally don’t have that much going on and am always looking for a way to procrastinate my homework and extend my weekend just a tad bit longer.  Naturally I would call this post “Awesome Sandwich Sunday” and since that’s too long to say, I would make it into an acronym… Well needless to say that wouldn’t work, so then my friend suggested that I call it SUPER Awesome Sandwich Sunday, and thus SASS was born. 

My plan was to start this weekly post in January 2012.  After I missed the first couple Sundays, I realized I should get on this whole “weekly post” thing, or otherwise it’s not a “weekly post.”  Since then I’ve decided that if I were to have a weekly post, I should post more often then that once a week, and lets face it, that probably won’t happen.  So I’ll still have SASS, and it will occur on some Sunday at some point in each month.  And since this is the last Sunday in January, here goes SASS#1.

Awesome Things:
1) I went skiing the last two weekends.
2) I don’t have very much homework.
3) I’m watching the Chuck Series Finale (and it’s awesome).

Notsome Things:
1) I’m watching the Chuck Series Finale (and it’s the last Chuck).
2) My Achilles’ tendon hurts.
3) There’s no snow in Boston.

Awesome Things:
1) I’m training for a marathon.
2) I have the best roommate in the world.
3) I know seven people who were born this week.

The End!

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

New York, New York!

I went to New York City this weekend for the first time ever!  I took the bus down from Boston and my aunt and grandma took the bus up from DC and we met in the middle.  Here are some pictures from our adventure!

Grandma and I in Times Square!

Cowgirl hat in Disney

Grandma and Aunt Joan in Rockefeller Center!

"The Rock"

We went to see Mamma Mia! On Broadway!!

The Statue of Liberty

The New York skyline

Ground Zero

Central Park!

Lego Statue of Liberty!! In F.A.O. Schwartz

All told I had a fantastic trip!  And now it’s back to the grind… 

Monday, January 9, 2012

You know its cold outside when...

1) Its warmer in your freezer.
2) Your hand sticks to the doorknob when you try to open it.
3) You cough when trying to breath the air.
4) Your eyebrows and eyelashes accumulate a visible layer of frost.
5) There’s less than a half-inch of mercury left in your thermometer.
6) The dog won’t go outside.
7) Your toes are perpetually numb.
8) The trees are white with hoar frost.
9) Your car won’t start.
10) Ice accumulates on the inside of your windows.

It’s not cold in Boston.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Holy Neptune, Lobsterman!

First off, this post has very little to do with the title.  So if that was your hook to start reading then you can stop now. 

I’ll start with the one relevant lobster reference.

Sometimes it gets kinda cold here, ok, really cold here.  Gloves or mittens are a necessity, whether for skiing, sledding, shoveling the driveway (which, by the way, I’ve been doing a LOT of in the last couple weeks), driving (so your hands don’t get stuck to the gearstick), or just walking around.  So the ultimate question: gloves or mittens?  The best part of gloves in my opinion is that you can use your fingers as they were designed to function.  Mittens of course inhibit this action, yet enable your fingers to stay close together and warm up.  My fingers get REALLY cold really easily, so I generally prefer mittens.  Then some genius (EXTREME sarcasm here) invented these mittens that had gloves on the inside.  So the outer layer looked like a mitten, but when you put your hand in it, it was like putting on gloves.  This, I would like to point out, defeats the best part of BOTH GLOVES AND MITTENS!  You can’t move around your fingers individually, and they are separated and don’t stay as warm.  Total failure.  Lobster gloves are another attempt at the fusion of gloves and mittens.  They allow two fingers to stay together and move independently of the other two fingers, and consequently look like lobster claws.  They also make you look like Spock stuck in a Vulcan salute “Live long and prosper!”  I have not tested this article in extreme weather conditions, so cannot advocate for their usefulness.  Glittens I’ve become a fan of.  Your fingers can stay warm, and then when you need to use them, just flip off the mitten part and BAM you have mobile fingers!  Mine also have llamas on them… so that may make me a little biased.

All right, on to something with purpose.

Today is my last day in Alaska, and it is quickly coming to a close.  I fly out in two short hours.  My time spent sitting in the Ted Stevens International Airport under wreaths bearing abnormally large pinecones with a blizzard raging outside is being spent ranting about the usefulness of gloves and mittens, and before I know it I will be back in Boston supposedly learning but also having a very good time with friends and family.  I had a fantastic break, but am looking forward to new adventures in Boston this semester, knowing I will be returning home in a few short months.  I will miss my friends and family dearly, you are all so special and more then coming home to Alaska I look forward to coming home to you.  Thank you all so so much.  Take care in the New Year.  Whether in Alaska or gallivanting elsewhere around the world, know that you are loved.  Good night everyone, good night moon (or should I say Neptune… to Thai it all in).

:) 

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Moments Like These


So much stress and hubbub usually surrounds this time of year, and I don’t want to be too cliché here with the “true meaning of Christmas” line, but there is a little I’d like to reflect on that I hope can mean something to someone.

Last week I went caroling with some friends.  We gathered together, practiced our songs (the typical holiday hymns), secured our hats, gloves, boots, and coats, and headed out into the chilly night air to spread some holiday warmth.  The overcast sky like a blanket held the earth.  Snowflakes fell silently, gathering in the folds of my jacket, and frosting the trees with a fresh layer of snow to transform the neighborhood into a winter wonderland.  Mountains of snow lined the paved driveways, and the streetlight on the corner cast an orange glow over the surrounding trees, fading into darkness beyond.

The first couple houses we stopped at greeted us graciously as we sung “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” and “What Child is This.”  Christmas smiles broke into grins on the faces of neighborhood children, and parents smiled kindly as our mediocre chorus but outstanding camaraderie filled the night.  With high spirits we continued around the block and arrived at a house while singing “Away in a Manger.”  The owner came to the door, chuckled a little, and then slowly shut the door and walked away.  We patiently finished the song, and then retreated humbly. 

The next house we approached with a little more caution.  I knocked on the door, and watched as an elderly man struggled to rise out of a chair to answer.  He slowly made his way to the front of the house, where we, perched on the porch steps, began “Silent Night.”  The man turned away…

Silent night! Holy night!
All is calm, all is bright.
Round yon Virgin, Mother and Child
Holy infant so tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly peace,
Sleep in heavenly peace.

…but only to open a side door and call to someone else.  A woman came.  Crawling on her hands and knees, through the door that he held open.  My voice wavered as I witnessed her struggling to make it down the hall towards the door we stood outside of, shivering in the cold.  She crawled until her head bumped against the glass door that separated her from us…

Silent night! Holy night!
Shepherds quake at the sight.
Glories stream from heaven afar,
Heavenly hosts sing Hallelujah,
Christ the Savior is born,
Christ the Savior is born!

…I reached forward to open the door, and held it while she sat back and looked up at us with tears in her eyes.  My voice caught, and I mouthed the words but no melody came from my lips.  She bowed before us crying, and then sat with her hands over her heart as we sang the final verse…

Silent night! Holy night!
Son of God love's pure light.
Radiant beams from Thy holy face,
With the dawn of redeeming grace,
Jesus, Lord at Thy birth,
Jesus, Lord at Thy birth.

I wished them a Merry Christmas, and backed away into the frigid night in awe.  It’s moments like these that make Christmas special.  It’s moments like these, finding the face of God in the faces around you, that make God’s grace real.