BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS »

Thursday, December 31, 2015

An old year ends, and a new year begins

Let us first look back on year 2015, what a wonderful year. I experienced everything pretty much. Here is 15 things that happened in 2015

  1. I moved to Idaho
  2. I spent time with family in Utah,
  3. I made new friends 
  4. I started a new school
  5. I bought my fifth laptop charger this year :) I have the worst luck, one caught fire.
  6. I turned 22
  7. I learned I was gonna be an aunt again
  8. I got my first big kid purse
  9. I got promoted at work Santa's Assistant Manager :)
  10. I started a new book
  11. I lost someone close to me
  12. I enjoyed lots of new music that came out
  13. I stepped up in the iphone game, and got an ipad
  14. I started taking control of my happiness
  15. I know that the gospel is where I find my happiness






This year has truly been amazing, I have learned so much about myself. I feel like I have grown in ways I didn't even know were possible. Shout out to my sisters who constantly keep me in check, and remind me to fight for the things I love. Shout out to all the kiddos in  my life, whether I am their nanny, or their Jordy. Shout out to new friends I made this, especially Becky, Jenna, and new work friends. Shout out to my old friends too who make time to be apart of my crazy life. Special shout out to the Smith family who adopted me for two weeks this summer (yes that includes Jenni's kids) :) And to my parents who only want the best for me. I can't wait for the new year. I just know even better things are waiting for me in 2016, I just have to chase after them. I will keep you posted. As for now, know I am having the time of my life with the people I need the most. 


Thursday, October 29, 2015

What it feels like to turn twenty-two!

On the eve of my twenty-second birthday I wanted to share my thoughts with you. Never have I ever felt older when my birthday has come. However this year was different. Even though it wasn't my birthday yet as soon as October first hit, I felt older. I felt twenty-two. What does it mean to feel twenty-two you ask? My feelings are this:
I am on the brink of having the best year of my life. I have this optimistic feeling rushing through my body. It's telling me that I have wonderful things coming to me. One of my new favorite songs called This'll Be My Year By Train says " No more countin' down the hours... Before I call it a day, Maybe this will be my year" I am nowhere near figuring out this thing called adulthood. But I know that tonight? It's a perfect night to dress up like hipsters, and have breakfast at midnight.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Not All Wounds are Visible: My Battle with Anxiety.

Before I realize what it is
the poison hits my heart.

This dark poison accelerates my beats per minute
The pounding hits my head.

I question what is happening,
and then it spreads.
The poison spreads to my body.
It hits my brain, and I rethink everything I've done.

I must have done something wrong.
I messed up sometime today.
Did I say the wrong thing?
Did I do the wrong thing?
I must have upset someone.

I try to remember the cures 
Listen to music
Breathe deeply
Go to your happy place.

The poison still spreads
The worry has overtaken me now.
I sit with my heart racing
Looking for answers

Where did I mess up?
Where is my mistake. 
It hurts, everything hurts.

This poison, this battle.
This anxiety.

I must stop it
I must go on
I must keep fighting.

This battle of mine?
I will win.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Don't eat raw cookie dough, you wouldn't want to go catching salmonella.

How many times when were kids did we hear an adult say "Don't eat the cookie dough. You could get salmonella and die." I personally heard it millions of times I feel like, and I never thought I would be the one to get salmonella poisoning. Before we start with my two weeks from the living dead let me clarify I didn't get salmonella from cookie dough. The verdict is still out on where I contracted my poison from.
It all started Friday August 14, I started to have vertigo spells, and I couldn't quite control my body temperature. Over the next three days things went from worse to terrible. I started to have major stomach cramps, running to the bathroom every 15 minutes, a migraine, body chills, body sweats, and pain from head to toe. My days were packed with naps, hot baths, and air conditioning. I would be freezing, and the only way to warm up would be a bath, then I would be hot and would have to sit in front of the air conditioner.
By Monday I was convinced that I was dying, I went to my mom crying and asked her if she could take me to the walk in clinic because my doctor was full, and I couldn't drive. I went we waited for about an hour and half only to be told I had a gastric virus and I should go vegan to help with my weight because that is where the pain was coming from. Monday night I started to have heart palpitations, and a migraine that only got worse. I was taking imodium, 1000mg of tylenol, 800mg of ibuprofen, and two benadryl (the miracle cocktail) to try and kick my migraine no such luck.
On Wednesday my mom had some errands to run, and I always like to go with her because it means I get to spend time with her. I grabbed my book, my blanket and got in the car. The first place we went was her foot doctor so she could drop some shoes off. I stayed in the car, I was freezing and I liked the warm sensation from the leather, and the hot windows on my hands. By the time we got to the dentist for her she told me I had to go in because I looked awful. Her dentist took my temperature and it was 103. I tried to schedule an appointment with my doctor but once again full. So my sister Alex picked me up, and dropped me off at the walk in clinic. Saw a different doctor who took a urine sample, and wanted a stool sample. He said I wasn't dehydrated just had a virus that my body was taking a long time to fight. He prescribed norco for the migraine, and sent me home.
Wednesday around 2 am I was losing it convinced I was dying, my mom thought I had meningitis because my neck had started to ache. Off we went to the ER where they gave me something that finally got rid of my headache, and a bag a fluids because I was indeed dehydrated.
On Thursday they got the results from my stool sample, and on Saturday a nurse called to inform me that I have salmonella. It took a whole week to find out that I have salmonella. Sorry this story took so long, but now I am healing. I am on antibiotics, and I am getting some much needed R&R in Northern Cali. I finally don't have a fever any more. I still am tired, and my body just feels angry. But the important things that we finally figured out what was wrong. Please be careful out there. Salmonella is painful, and awful. Heres a link for more info on the poison that destroyed me. And it is also highly contagious! So wash your hands, don't eat raw chicken, and wash your hands.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/salmonella/basics/definition/con-20029017
 

Sunday, June 14, 2015

"And I am only telling you this because life can do terrible things"

Jordan Jarvis

Economics: Yamada

Period 1: Omega

October 1, 2010

A Rose by Another Name
Rosaleen Barber was born May 16th, 1927, and died June 14, 2015. Rosaleen also known as Rosie, she has been my neighbor sense I was 5, the only one that I can remember. Growing up Rosie would have paid .34 cents for a gallon of gas, today she would roughly pay around 2.90 to 3.00 dollars for a gallon of gas. She would have paid for a single candy bar a penny to a nickel, now she might pay 1 to 2 dollars. For a cheeseburger Rosie would have paid around .35 cents, Now days she could pay anywhere from 1 to 5 dollars for a cheese burger. She would have paid around 10 cents for a coke bottle, and now one dollar to a dollar fifty. The most significant changes she has observed in the economy from when she grew up to now have gotten worse.
Rosie grew up in 4 different states, graduating from high school in 1946 in Spokane Washington. There were from 800-1000 students in her graduating class. In 1947 Rosie married her husband Raymond Barber. He also having a name shortened to Ray. Ray served in the navy for four years, serving at the end of World War II. They had 3 kids, and moved from Washington to Oregon in 1953, they lived on a farm and had many animals, also including 7 acres. In 1990 they moved to there home right next doors to ours. They moved because it was time to be in town, closer to doctors, and other important things. In 2007 Ray passed on, and still to this day we referee to our neighbors as Ray and Rosie.
Rosie grew up in a stable environment, there was always food on her table, and clothes on her back. They never went without. She said that when faced with a hardship “You work around them, and pray a lot. Do the best you can”. During the war they were given stamps for food, meat, and gas. She said that “Once you used them all up no gas!” referring to the fact of gas being rationed during the war.
Besides Rosie babysitting, she worked for Consolidated Freightways, and JC Penny’s. She got the jobs by applying where she knew they needed help. When she was speaking with the person hiring for Consolidated Freightways, the man said “We really are looking for people with experience.”, and she said to him “ How can people get experience if no one will hire them.” She was then offered the job and accepted. Later moving on to JC Penny’s. She prepared for these jobs by studying business in high school. She found nothing unrewarding with her jobs, she said “You learn something every time you do something.”
Rosie feels that today’s economy has gotten worse as its advanced. There’s not enough common sense used today. The money that the economy gets for certain things like schools, and public safety could be utilized better by those obtaining the money. There has been a lot of changes from her youth to mine. All electronic devices, and too much to say. Some of these have been good and some haven’t. There is so many things going on today, that people just can’t cope with. She can remember her parents sending her to play at the park across from their house, with her German Shepard cop dog, and everything being okay. They would leave their doors unlocked at night and not have to fear that someone would break in.
The advice that Rosie shared with me was “Hang in there, and learn all you can”. Never stop learning, it will help you in the future. Just about everything in this economy world is such a mess. She said “ The older you get the more frustrating it gets. You have to deal with so many things.” Rosie believes that the most important things for high school students to learn are financial, political aspects, pretty much everything in general she said “It all comes together eventually.”