Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Living an Uncomplicated Life

I stumbled upon this and I love the simple reminders incorporated in here. So often we make situations and tasks much more complicated than they needed to be and we nearly run ourselves into the ground to complete them. I have found recently that even the smallest task seems to tire me. It is not the task that is actually tiring, but rather my mind making the task seem like life and death. I wanted to repost this list to not only share it, but to have it forever have it bookmarked for me personally. I also added a few notes in blue throughout the list. I think that the secret to living a fulfilling live could be embedded in this list somewhere. Here are 100 ways to uncomplicate your life. Enjoy!

1. Don’t try to read other people’s minds
2. Get up 30 minutes earlier so that you don’t rush/get a ticket while driving too fast/have to explain why   you’re late/get fired
3. Get 8 hours of sleep per night so that you think more clearly (LOVE!)
4. Stick to your budget
5. Start saving and investing every week, no matter how little you can spare
6. Balance your checkbook
7. Don’t try to be friends with everyone. Cultivate closer relationships with fewer people.
8. Don’t try to do business with everyone. Identify your target client and take very good care of them.
9. Before getting angry, ask yourself if it will really matter in 20 years
10. Focus on being a good person, not on pleasing others 
11. Stay home this Saturday, and finish off that nagging chore that you need to finish
12. Kiss and make up
13. Make a weekly menu, and shop for only those items at the market
14. Ask your grandparents the best way to uncomplicate life, and try it for a month
15. Fill up your gas tank when it’s half full
16. Don’t drink alcohol when you’re tired, sad or mad
17. Pay your bills on time
18. Get an annual physical examination
19. Say “I love you” to your significant other and to your children. Studies show that more marriages last, and fewer kids use drugs, when these words are spoken every day.
20. For just one day, imagine everyone’s intentions are good because most people’s are
21. Give away clothes that haven’t been worn in two years
22. Throw out clothes that are in disrepair, and can’t be mended
23. When you have a conflict with someone, talk it out. Don’t let it turn into more than it is.
24. Know what your priorities are in life, and act as if they are your priorities
25. Tell the truth
26. Don’t cheat
27. Don’t steal
28. If you’re holding on to a ridiculous grudge, let it go
29. Clean your house weekly, so that it doesn’t become too large a chore
30. Do your best at work, or at school
31. Don’t eat when you aren’t hungry
32. Eat when you are hungry
33. Be yourself
34. Say no unapologetically
35. Cook simple meals
36. Don’t try to keep up with the Joneses
37. Pay off your car before buying a new one
38. Organize your desk at the office
39. Change your smoke alarm batteries when the clocks spring forward, and again when they fall back
40. Organize your important paperwork
41. Take only half the clothes that you planned to take with you on holiday
42. Help your children with their homework every night, and have an open dialogue with their teachers
43. Have white sheets and white towels in children’s rooms/bathrooms, because they’re easily bleached
44. Spend your time with nice people
45. Avoid drama
46. Don’t text or talk on the phone while driving
47. Turn off the television/video games/computer; they’re time consumers
48. Don’t engage in office politics
49. Refuse to gossip, or talk behind other people’s backs
50. Do the dishes right after dinner
51. Never go to sleep angry
52. Ask nicely for what you need and want
53. Walk 10,000 steps per day to help your heart
54. Do 20 push-ups before speaking in anger (We'd have a lot of strong people in the world)
55. Leave work at work
56. Don’t befriend anyone that isn’t trustworthy
57. Don’t envy others
58. Have your oil changed
59. Take vitamin C BEFORE you catch a cold
60. Don’t work more than 8 hours per day
61. Weed your garden weekly
62. Wash your car weekly
63. Have a spring cleaning month every year, and do one room at a time
64. You don’t need to be best friends with work colleagues, but build respectful partnerships
65. Don’t drink and drive
66. Don’t look for reasons to be angry or sad, look for reasons to be happy. You’ll always be able to find plenty of each.
67. Be friendly with your neighbors
68. Return emails and phone messages promptly
69. Schedule in free time
70. Don’t procrastinate (Shoot.)
71. Do what you say you’ll do, when you say you’ll do it
72. Be more flexible when you’re able to be
73. Forgive and forget. End of story.
74. Break the consumerism habit…put a three month moratorium in place on buying anything not deemed a necessity
75. Start your diet on September 1, rather than January 1, so that you won’t also have holiday pounds to lose
76. Take care of any health issues or concerns
77. Have your tires rotated
78. Have your brakes checked
79. Have your eyes checked (before you start driving your car again, please)
80. Don’t let your imagination run away with you (not sure if I agree with this 100%. In my opinion, part of the fun in life is having a great imagination.)
81. Let go of perfection in others
82. Let go of perfection in yourself
83. Don’t try to help those that refuse to help themselves
84. Find a way to reduce your commute to work
85. Have an allotted amount of worry time per day/week, that you strictly abide by (LOVE!)
86. Drink more water
87. Eat more salmon
88. Don’t make a mountain out of a molehill
89. Wear your hair in a classic, easy to care for style
90. Finish what you start
91. Wear classic clothes and shoes that never go out of style
92. Create a daily routine
93. Have a 1, 5, 10 and 20 year plan for your financial and life goals
94. Slow down
95. Eat out less often
96. When you ask your husband which outfit looks best, thank him for his answer and wear the one he liked rather than focusing on why he didn’t like the other one
97. Allow your children to grow up
98. Clean out your garage, and donate anything that hasn’t been used in the past year
99. Stretch every day
100. If a relationship is over, let it go.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Afraid to Blink

For the past 2 weeks, I have refused to believe that my freshman year is over. It hadn't hit me and, in a way, I was hoping that it never would. Yet, here I am getting text messages from friends a year younger than me while they sit through graduation practice. The texts remind me of where I was a year ago and all that I had to look forward to: moving away from home, living in Athens, and experiencing everything that freshman year would offer to me. The past year doesn't seem real. It all happened so slowly while I was experiencing it, but I look back now and it's all a blur.
I remember being so excited to move in with my roommate. Kelsey was and is amazing! I know that my early bed times and random mood swings were annoying at times, but she bared them. We got to the point where we could guess what the other was thinking just by the look on her face and she could tell when I was upset, even if I was just sitting there. I remember decorating our room for her 18th birthday and still putting up the sign when she walked in. I remember taking our iPods to the showers and listening to song after song (and wasting so much water). I remember her texting me about our dorm winning the Green Cup. Most of all though, I will always remember laughing so hard we cried when we saw the "Burn, baby, burn" picture, watching all of the movies that she had never seen (especially How to Lose a Guy In 10 Days on our last night together in the dorms), and the countless hours that we studied in the SLC during finals Spring semester. They are memories for a lifetime and I can honestly say that I wouldn't have survived without my awesome roomie, Kelsey!
I remember giving Kelsey an "Oh, crap" look when our neighbors across the hall slammed their door on us on move in day. Savannah and Taylor, however, became two of my favorite people and my best friends. I will never forget the country music that you blasted whenever you were in your room (and even sometimes when you weren't in your room). You two were always there to help me get ready for my date nights and always listened when I got home that night. Taylor, I will always remember sitting with you studying for finals Fall semester and switching my relationship status as well as hanging out in my room talking about what we want to be when we grew up. Savannah, as weird as this is to say (and everyone on our hall knows that it is true), I will never forget how you never seemed to be wearing clothes. I remember when we learned that you slept walked. I will also remember
The 2nd floor guys.... oh what to remember. I remember Ackerman stealing a massive soda bottle top for me. I remember the corn conversations with John. I remember AJ somehow always being on the 4th floor when I was in my towel wrap and saying "belt it." I remember the look of shock and surprise on Alex's face when he went to Tacky Christmas with me. I remember playing football with Peters, Greg, and Hayden on our snow days and people jumping into bushes just to catch the ball. You guys were my comedic relief every day and especially when I needed it.
We were the Hill hall family and I can't believe that we are moved out and already getting ready for next year. I know that moving on and growing up is a part of life that everyone has to go through, but I never thought that it would be my turn to move on or my turn to grow up. Now, I'm sitting here researching study abroad programs for Summer 2012 and moving back into my childhood room (only to pack it up again in 2 months). As much as I am looking forward to my sophomore year, I am afraid to blink. I am afraid that if I do, I will suddenly be graduating college and asking people where the past four years went. So, for now, I am just going to remember the good times of freshman year and the amazing people that I was so fortunate to get to know.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Looking Back

I should be sleeping right now, but I am still trying to get off of college time and back onto normal person time. I should also be writing about my freshman year experience, but I am still in denial so that is going to have to wait. I've been trying to get tired, so I have been searching the net and checking out people's blogs and I came across one that my best friend wrote about all of the friend drama that I experienced. I called her crying and she was there, even after we had drifted apart throughout our freshman year. She was the person that was first on my speed dial and couldn't go 15 minutes without texting, calling, or seeing. She was the sister I never had and, even though she has three sisters, made me feel like I was her sister too. I love her to this day for all of the amazing things that she has done and will continue to do in my life.
It was a weird day. Two of my three best friends from high school and I went back to the old stomping grounds to see old teachers and friends. It was a hard situation to wrap my head around while it was happening. Here I was officially a sophomore in college and I was walking through my old high school like a new born. I wasn't lost, but it felt different. It wasn't mine. I had moved on and so had the students and teachers that I spoke with. We all grow up and change. I know that I have grown up (my parents beg to differ), but I still expected my favorite freshman from last year to be a freshman. Now, he is taller than I am, driving, and almost an upperclassman. When did that happen?
What was even weirder was going back to the place that brought my best friends and I so close together. I refuse to say that we have grown apart, because I know that I can still call them in the middle of the night if I need to and they will be there for me. However, we have all had very different experiences our freshman year and have definitely come into our own. We've grown up and matured and seen many things that we wished we would not have. We danced with strangers and stayed out too late. We’ve grown close to other people and regret doing some things. We have different life goals than a year ago, but still strive to be the best women that we can. We’re different, but still all the same and I love that about them.

Friday, May 6, 2011

"Leaver" vs. "Left"

My friends know that I am slightly addicted to Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and, while I am intrigued by their investigations and love the suspense of the show, I have become aware of how alone the "bad guys" are. I am not sticking up for people who commit crimes, but rather am advocating that you never do anything that would make you wind up in jail. In one episode, Detective Stabler is so caught up in a victim's traumatizing past that he decides to put himself in "the hole" for three days. The cameras follow his 72 hour experience and it is mentally agonizing to watch. This is a weird way to begin a post, but I have recently found myself feeling like Stabler in the hole: alone and unsure what to do.
Throughout my life, I have been unquestionably blessed with amazing friends. While some of those friendships have fizzled out and others have become more distant, I like to think of myself as a fairly good friend. I'm not perfect, no one is, but I do try extremely hard to always be a shoulder to cry on and a person to laugh at jokes. While I believe that no one should have any regrets and that regrets should be turned into lessons, I've made mistakes and I do regret some of them.
I regret having been the "leaver" in relationships. It's not that I necessarily was upset with a friend, but we were either not in the same class anymore or we were just growing apart. I have never felt like the person who was left in a friendship, until just recently. I have already written about my biffles from high school and how I felt as though I had lost them. I am determined though to reconcile and rebuild those relationships because, I have discovered, that I cannot live without the Fab Four. Now, it is a new set of friendships that has me confused. (If it's not one, it's the other. Right?)
The friends that I had in my dorm this first year of college I considered to be some of my dearest friends. Recently, however I don't even feel comfortable in my dorm (aka home for the time being). I just do not understand. I have been racking my brain trying to figure out if I did something or said something and, time and time again, I cannot think of anything. It's like I'm stuck in this shattered environment that I can only escape with time. That time, however, is ticking away at a snails pace. While I am not ready to move away from the best location on campus and I am not ready to leave my roomie, I am ready to leave the awkwardness and confusion that is surrounding me. All I can think of it that this is the ultimate lesson: I will never be the "leaver" in a relationship again. Now, seeing how the "left" feels, I could never purposely put someone through that kind of pain. I never want someone to experience how I feel now. Lesson learned.