Category Archives: Diversions

The stuff that didn’t fit elsewhere.

So, I’ve been camping in the basement

A few days before 2016 arrived, the venerable Angie posted a link to something called “Yoga Camp” on her Facebook page. She generally has good ideas, so I clicked to find out what it was all about. It was a 30-day at-home yogathon hosted by a cute Texan named Adriene, and it involved daily yoga and daily mantras, and the Yoga Camp page called it a “bootcamp for your mind, your body and your soul,” which sounded pretty woo-woo to me. But it was allegedly accessible to the out-of-shape and inflexible and most important of all it was free.

Hello Muddah. Hello Fadduh.
Hello Muddah. Hello Fadduh.

So I signed up.

I signed up under the assumption that I would ignore the mantras and that I wouldn’t be able to do the majority of the work and that I’d get discouraged and quit before Day 5. That’s a terrible way to start any project, isn’t it? Sometimes I have a very bad attitude. By the first day of Yoga Camp, though, I’d decided that not only was I going to do this project for my physical health, I was going to try to adjust my attitude as well. I was going to at least try to downward-dog and mantra my way through the entire 30 days.

And now here it is mid-January, and I’ve done yoga every day for the past 17 days. Even more surprising, I’m setting my alarm clock a little earlier and looking forward to getting up and greeting the day with a little yoga.

Every morning I go down to the basement, I clean up the Disney Infinity figures that Pete has inevitably left on the floor, and I move the coffee table. I crank up the TV and the Xbox and turn the dial to the Yoga with Adriene channel, and then — here’s the kicker — I do my best. I’ve fallen over a few times, and I’ve been unable to follow along once or twice. But I’m trying.

The multicolored Pottery Barn rug I picked up a few years ago for $20 at a yard sale does a serviceable job as a yoga mat, Marsha T. Cat likes to sit and groom herself in the most obtrusive place she can find, and I still can’t fold myself into a child’s pose. But every now and then I’m able to move in a way I was sure I wouldn’t be able to move, and every now and then that daily mantra business — I embrace, I create, I enjoy, I am bold, I am present, I am alive — actually clicks.

So here it is mid-January, and I’m more than half way through Yoga Camp. My body feels a little better, and my mind and my soul — woo-woo though it may be — are both feeling better as well. I don’t feel any more flexible, but I feel a lot more peaceful. I very much wish Yoga Camp could go on forever, and I’m really happy that I took a chance on it.

The one with all the books

When I logged into Goodreads last week to record a book I’d finished, I noticed a link at the top of the page that said “See your year in books.” So I clicked on it and found that Goodreads has compiled a very nifty page with all sorts of statistics about my reading this year. They didn’t include an option to embed it, so I copied it all as jpeg files to share here.

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I set out to read 40 books in 2015, and I ended up with 43. This may be the only area in which I exceeded expectations this year.

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I love that they included the “most popular” and “least popular” titles I read this year. I read “Eleanor and Park” after reading many, many rave reviews about it. Most of the people I know who’d read it said it made them cry; I can’t remember whether or not I cried, but it was a pretty good book. “The Mechanical” was the last book I finished this year. I read about it on BuzzFeed’s list of the best sci-fi of 2015. It was a weird and intriguing book of reimagined history, and I’ll be surprised if it doesn’t gain in popularity on Goodreads. I’ll be looking out for the next book in the series.

Here’s everything I read this year:

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My favorite books this year were — in no particular order — “Jurassic Park,” “Wave,” “The Martian” and “The Song of Achilles.” I hadn’t read “Jurassic Park” before, and I liked it even more than the movie. “Wave” is a memoir by a woman who lost her family in the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka, and it is beautifully raw and devastating. I loved the movie version of “The Martian,” but the book is a little richer in detail and characterization. I read “The Song of Achilles” when I was preparing for my Greek mythology class. It isn’t canon, but it’s an interesting telling of Achilles’ story from an alternative voice.

On the other side of the equation, my least favorite reads were “Mr. Mercedes,” “Killing Floor” and “A Cold Day in Paradise.” That wasn’t really surprising, as I’ve mostly stopped reading murder mysteries. I picked each of them up on a whim and didn’t enjoy either. I was also somewhat disappointed in two books I’d been looking forward to reading. “As Chimney Sweepers Come to Dust” and “Avenue of Mysteries” just weren’t as good as previous books by their respective authors.

I’m aiming to read 40 books again in 2016, and I’m starting with a few more selections from BuzzFeed’s sci-fi list. I’ll also continue working through my presidential biographies. I’ve been stuck on Madison for a few months, so I don’t imagine they’ll make up the bulk of my 2016 reading. What do you think I should read next?

Five years of cannonballs

“Hey,” said Rockford as I spun through old photos in iPhoto. “You should make a composite of all the years of me jumping into the swimming pool at your dad’s house.”

“I can do that,” said I.

And so I did.

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