#FitReaders Check-In #33

Geeky Bloggers Book Blog
  • This check-in is for August 10th – 16th.  I’m still on Summer break, so I didn’t do week three of the 10-Week Mindful Diet Plan for Healthy Eating from Yoga Journal.
  • I’ve been staying indoors and out of the oven that is Texas in August.  Mostly, I’ve been gaming and reading, and the only exercise I’m getting is when I play with Dresden, the cat and when I clean.
  • I return to school for my final semester next week.  I’ll pick my goals back up at that time.
  • If you’d like to add me as a friend on FitBit, you can find me HERE.
  • Yoga Workouts: 0/7
  • Steps: 13,909/56,000
  • Miles: 5.71/21
  • Flights of stairs: 2/70
  • Active Minutes: 0/210
  • Total Money Donated: $16.63

Call for Recommendations: New Orleans

Ursuline St from River Levee French Quarter
Image: Infrogmation of New Orleans

I’m ridiculously excited!  The Boyfriend and I are going to New Orleans in September for our 2nd anniversary!  What is even better is that, since he has already been there, but I haven’t, he’s making the plans.  So far, I know that we’re staying in an old hotel full of antique furniture, and our room will have a private balcony overlooking the French Quarter.  We will also be going on a couple different tours, but he hasn’t worked out the details for those yet.

The Boyfriend has requested that I bring along several audiobooks for us to listen to during the long drive.  That’s where I need your help.  I want to listen to and read books set in New Orleans, or Louisiana in general.  However, with the exception of many of Anne Rice’s books and the “Sookie Stackhouse” series, I’m at a loss for what to read.  So, regardless of genre, what would you recommend?

I will try to find your recommendations at the library, and before the Boyfriend and I head off on our trip, I’ll let you all know what books I’ll be taking with me.

#ShelfLove: The Best Bookish Gifts

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This month, the hosts of the #ShelfLove No Book Buying Challenge want us to share the best bookish gifts we’ve given or received.  While I was thinking about the various gifts I’ve gotten over the years, I realized that, with the exception of bookstore gift cards, my family doesn’t get me bookish gifts.  The Boyfriend and his family?  They’re considerably more thoughtful when it comes to gift giving.  It’s not that I don’t appreciate bookstore gift cards.  Oh, trust me, I do. The one my Mom got me for Christmas allowed me to get The Outlandish Companion, Vol. 1 by Diana Gabaldon (and several ebooks) without going against the No Book Buying Challenge.  However, gift cards don’t require much thought.

In the almost two years the Boyfriend and I have been together (our anniversary is next month! <3), I’ve received the following thoughtful and bookish gifts from him and his family:

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This was half of my gift for our first anniversary.

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This is the second half of my anniversary gift.  Though it’s not technically bookish, it replaced a computer chair that my best friend gave me, which was by that time completely worn out and beginning to cause me quite a bit of back pain.  There’s no way I would be able to get everything done for this blog and my college classes every day without this chair.

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These are some of the stocking stuffer gifts that the Boyfriend’s Mom put in my Christmas stocking.

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This is a metal Celtic bookmark that Pete, the Boyfriend’s Mom’s husband, gave me for Christmas.  Though he didn’t know it at the time, I had been eyeing bookmarks like this for awhile, but wouldn’t buy one because they cost about as much as a paperback.  He said he got it because every time he saw me, I was always reading.

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Probably the best bookish gift I’ve ever gotten from anyone is my Kindle, which the Boyfriend got me for Christmas.  He also got me the USB power adapter, and that was the first gift from him that I opened.  You’ve never seen a girl get excited over an adapter unless you saw me when I realized it meant the other box was a Kindle.

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The second best bookish gift is this Kindle cover, which anyone who loves Doctor Who will recognize as River Song’s journal.  I have the Best.Boyfriend.Ever.2015-08-13 01.16.23

For my Birthday last year, the Boyfriend got me these beautiful editions of Grimm’s Fairy Tales and The Arabian Nights.  He got me several other books as well, but these are special for two reasons.  One, he knows I love fairy tales, and two, I rarely ever buy myself hardcover editions despite having to stop myself from drooling over how substantial and permanent they look on the shelf.  Hardcovers say, “Here’s a private book collection to be passed down to future generations.”  My budget says, “That’s at least FIVE mass market paperbacks from the used bookstore.”

Though I haven’t pictured it here, one very thoughtful gift my Dad gave me for no other reason than he knows how much I love to read, but don’t have the money to buy books.  It’s a disc full of free ebooks.  I don’t count them in my TBR because there are too many books for me to read in a lifetime.  There are also a lot of genre books on the disc that I know I’ll never read.  However, I’ve discovered quite a few books on there that are great and I likely wouldn’t have found otherwise.

My BFF and I have gotten into the habit of gifting each other with books ever since she got in a scarily bad accident and was in the hospital with far too much time on her hands.  I immediately bought a tote bag full of books to keep her mind busy and got her hooked on a new series in the process.  Now she and her husband keep an ear open to the books I wish I could buy and get them for me for Birthdays and Christmases.  The most recent one was Seraphina by Rachel Hartman.  Somehow they managed to pick up a copy right in front of me without my seeing and then gave it to me when we were out of the store.  I’m pretty sure they’re secretly ninjas.

#FitReaders Check-In #32

Geeky Bloggers Book Blog
  • This check-in is for August 3rd – 9th.  I didn’t do week three of the 10-Week Mindful Diet Plan for Healthy Eating from Yoga Journal.
  • I accomplished nothing this week other than a whole lot of reading and gaming.  This is my last Summer break before I graduate from college and have to return to adulthood.
  • I return to school for my final semester the last week of August.  I’ll pick my goals back up at that time.
  • If you’d like to add me as a friend on FitBit, you can find me HERE.
  • Yoga Workouts: 0/7
  • Steps: 22,340/56,000
  • Miles: 9.17/21
  • Flights of stairs: 22/70
  • Active Minutes: 42/210
  • Total Money Donated: $16.23

Saturday’s Sit Down with Lisa Van Wormer

A couple of weeks ago I came across a piece on Huffington Post by Lisa Van Wormer, titled “Exit Stage Left: Leaving the Military a Different Person”.  This was the first time I had ever read a relatable story by and about a woman combat veteran.  As many of you know, I served in the Army, but you don’t have to have been in the military to understand how it feels to finally read a story that could be about you.  After visiting her website and finding two of her other pieces (“Roll Call” and “The Rucksack”), I contacted her to see if she would like to do an interview.  The following is the result of our conversation.

Lisa Van Wormer headshot

I noticed that the bio on Lisa Van Wormer’s website said she had a degree in Negotiation, Conflict Resolution, and Peace Building. With that information in mind, I asked what made her decide to enter the Creative Writing and Publishing MFA program at the University of Baltimore?  I was surprised when she told me that originally she had been pre-Law at Michigan State University before she enlisted in the military shortly after 9/11.  She said all she’d ever wanted to do was help people, but she quickly realized that Law was more about memorization, rules, and procedures than anything else.  While she uses her degree every day and had a government job after she got out of the Army, she decided to use her GI Bill education benefit to explore creative writing, something she has been interested in for as long as she can remember.

Lisa’s parents are the first readers of her writing.

She told me how her extremely patient parents have always supported her creative efforts, even serving as her captive audience throughout her childhood years when she would write and put together little books of her stories.  That creativity has carried on into her adult life, and she said she has never been bored with the Creative Writing and Publishing program.  She also loves reading Fantasy, but when it came down to what she wanted to write, she chose to write about her life and experiences because she sees memoir writing as simply telling the truth.  Since she knows better than anyone else what her time in the Army was like, she decided to write what she knows.

Ashley’s War by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon and A Girl at War by Sara Nović are both war stories by women, but neither author is an Amercian Soldier.

However, there was another reason she chose to write about life in the Army.  She said, with the exception of two books by women (neither of whom are American soldiers), women’s experiences of war aren’t being told.  They’re just not there.  To make matters worse, when women’s stories are told in the mainstream news outlets, those women are all lumped together under the subject of “women in the military” and the reporters focus on topics such as “women in combat” or “sexual assault in the military.”  It’s as if their individual stories aren’t as important as the issues surrounding them.  While male soldiers also get lumped together in news media, there is also a plethora of personal stories by and about men and their experiences with war.  There are so many that someone unfamiliar with the American military might think that women don’t also wear the uniform.

“I read ‘American Sniper’, but I’m not him.”

Lisa had some thoughts on why that might be.  She reminded me that only 1% of the American population serves in the military.  Then she told me that, of that 1%, only 17% are women.  Also, she thinks that perhaps societal gender norms and roles make it difficult for many people to be comfortable with the idea of women going to war.  They might accept it, even if grudgingly, and they might be willing to discuss the issues, but to read or see the story of a woman in combat might be too much.  She’s hoping that will change.  It needs to change, and she’s doing everything she can to see that it does.  Our stories need to be told, and they need to be shared.  As Lisa said, “I read ‘American Sniper’, but I’m not him.”

She went on to tell me that she wants to see all kinds of stories about women in the military including why they enlist, why they choose to stay in or get out, and everything in between.  Even if she doesn’t agree with some of those experiences, she still appreciates them because it means women’s stories are being told, and there are likely other women out there who read them and sees themselves in those stories.  As I told her after I had read her stories, I felt as if my experiences in the Army were suddenly more valid.  I also felt an instant connection with her as a woman who had had similar experiences.  When you’re a minority of a minority, those connections can make all the difference.  Another, but much more troubling statistic that Lisa shared with me is that women in the military are six times more likely to commit suicide than women who haven’t served.  There is no doubt that many of those suicides are because we often feel alone and with no one to talk to about what we’re going through during and after a deployment.

When you’re a minority of a minority, those connections can make all the difference.

Lisa's AuthorsOne way that many soldiers cope with being deployed is to read.  Having used books to escape the realities of Iraq, I asked Lisa what books she turned to during her deployment.  Without missing a beat, she said, “Harry Potter!”  She then told me she wrote to Amazon about being deployed and that getting mail in Iraq took longer than it would if she were in the States, but she wanted to pre-order Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, despite knowing she wouldn’t get it until well after its release date.  To her surprise, she received her copy of the new sixth Harry Potter book two days after it was released.  Amazon shipped it early to make sure she got it when everyone else would.

Fantastic Beasts

Would you like to help get books into the hands of deployed soldiers?   Go to BOOKSFORSOLDIERS.COM

Lisa M. Van Wormer writes about being a woman, a mother, and about her time in and after the Army to include her deployment experiences in Iraq.  She has had memoir essays published as featured articles in the Baltimore Fishbowl, read some of them as a part of The Signal, a weekly news radio magazine on the local Baltimore NPR station (WYPR), and has been a featured presenter at multiple veteran focused events.  She is currently working on a short book of personal essays and a full-length book about her deployment.

 

#FitReaders Check-In #31

Geeky Bloggers Book Blog
  • This check-in is for July 27th – August 2nd.  I completed week two of the 10-Week Mindful Diet Plan for Healthy Eating from Yoga Journal.
  • My cat Dresden freaked out about some random thing while I was holding him, and my hand and arm took the brunt of his frantic attempt to get away.  Even after I was able to type and use my computer mouse again, I couldn’t do most yoga positions.  So, I skipped the yoga this week.
  • Now that my Summer class has come to an end (today is my Final), I’ll be switching to doing yoga at night during the week before I go to bed.  By the time I’ll be getting up in the morning, the Boyfriend will be going to bed, and I won’t be able to use the TV.
  • If you’d like to add me as a friend on FitBit, you can find me HERE.
  • Yoga Workouts: 0/7
  • Steps: 25,047/56,000
  • Miles: 10.29/21
  • Flights of stairs: 43/70
  • Active Minutes: 66/210
  • Total Money Donated: $14.89

#FitReaders Check-In #30

Geeky Bloggers Book Blog
  • This check-in is for July 20th – 26th.  I completed week one of the 10-Week Mindful Diet Plan for Healthy Eating from Yoga Journal.
  • I did great during the week but ran into some snags that I hadn’t thought about or planned for over the weekend.  My original plan was to do yoga in the morning before I got ready to go to class, but on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday I would do yoga at night before I went to bed.  Well, Friday night is the one night I get the apartment to myself and can do whatever I want because it’s the Boyfriend’s gaming night.  The last thing I wanted to do was interrupt my fun with yoga.  Saturday night is date night, and Sunday night was spent studying for a test.
  • I’ll continue to do yoga in the morning during the week, including Friday, and at night on Sunday, but I’m not sure what to do for Saturday.  The Boyfriend works 3rd shift and has to sleep during the day so I do everything I can to be as silent as possible and keep my use of light to a minimum.
  • If you’d like to add me as a friend on FitBit, you can find me HERE.
  • Yoga Workouts: 4/7
  • Steps: 27,634/56,000
  • Miles: 11.35/21
  • Flights of stairs: ?/70 – my Fitbit went funky and told me I had climbed an impossible number of stairs, so I don’t know the actual number.
  • Active Minutes: 94/210
  • Total Money Donated: $13.96

#FitReaders Check-In #29

Geeky Bloggers Book Blog
  • This check-in is for July 13th – 19th.  I will be trying something different for the next ten weeks.  Instead of concentrating and failing week after week to reach my step goal, I’m doing the 10-Week Mindful Diet Plan for Healthy Eating from Yoga Journal.  It’s free and doesn’t require me to buy anything to follow the plan.
  • I started the plan yesterday so I won’t be updating on my progress until next week.
  • I’ll still try to get my steps in and track that information, but as of this morning, I’m starting a daily yoga practice in keeping with the plan.  I’ve added seven yoga sessions a week to my fitness goals listed below.
  • If you’d like to join me on this 10-week journey, leave a comment or friend me on Facebook.  If you don’t own any yoga DVDs or can go to a class, there are tons of free yoga videos on Youtube.
  • If you’d like to add me as a friend on FitBit, you can find me HERE.
  • Yoga Workouts: 0/7
  • Steps: 23,601/56,000
  • Miles: 9.69/21
  • Flights of stairs: 32/70
  • Active Minutes: 51/210
  • Total Money Donated: $12.98

Friday’s Fairy Tales: Rapunzel

Rapunzel - Ihave3kids
Image: Ihave3kids

The fairy tale “Rapunzel” comes from one of the stories of the Saints.  During the 3rd century AD, a wealthy merchant in Asia Minor loved his daughter so much that he forbade her to have any suitors.  He locked her in a tower whenever he traveled.  She converted to Christianity and prayed so loudly when she was in the tower that her prayers were heard throughout the town.  The merchant, informed of her actions, took her before the Roman proconsul who insisted she be beheaded or the father would have to forfeit his fortune if she refused to give up her newfound faith.  The father decapitated her but was then killed by a lightning strike.  She became the martyr, Saint Barbara.

The version of the story the Grimm’s were told was thought to be a folktale, but as it turns out, was actually written by Giambattista Basile in 1637.  It was rewritten by a French aristocrat, Charlotte Rose de Caumont de la Force in 1697.  The 1697 version was translated into German by J.C.F. Shulz, but the Grimm brothers were unaware of this fact.

In the Grimm version, which is almost identical to the Shulz translation, Rapunzel lets her hair down for a prince to climb into her tower and ends up pregnant.  The witch chops off Rapunzel’s hair and magically transports her far away, where she lives as a beggar with no money, no home, and a baby.  The witch lures the prince up into the tower and then pushes him from the window.  Some thorn bushes break his fall, but also blind him.  However, as with most fairy tales, there’s still a happy ending for the two lovers.

If you want to read a more modern version of this classic fairy tale, check out the following books (all links are to Goodreads):

 

#FitReaders Check-In #28

Geeky Bloggers Book Blog
  • This check-in is for July 6th – 12th.  My goal was to walk more than I did the week before, and that’s exactly what I did, so I’m happy.
  • I’m going to try to average 8K steps a day again now that I’m no longer having stomach problems.
  • If you’d like to add me as a friend on FitBit, you can find me HERE.
  • Steps: 39,883/56,000
  • Miles: 16.38/21
  • Flights of stairs: 78/70
  • Active Minutes: 169/210
  • Total Money Donated: $11.97