Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Fixed!
And a list of things I love about Boise will from now on be a permanant part of the bottom of the first page. I'm sure I will occasionally add to it.
Marilyn
1+1 makes life so much easier
My job is good. I'm off orientation now and have worked 5 shifts on my own. I usually have 5 patients at night, and, yes, it is stressful. But I'm getting better. And it's been good.
Love y'all!
cc
Picture Problems
So for now you get just my words.
I'll try to make them interesting. :o)
High School Insecurity
So I've been working out occasionally at the ASU gym. Turns out that working out during the summer is totally different than working out during the school year. I went with Brad and totally felt like the dorky kid of the world. I felt kind of like I had gone and bought an outfit on clearance at Sears and then went to work out at Abercrombie and Fitch without any make-up. So cool. My legs were so white and my little race for the cure shirt.....oh my goodness....and all these little 20 year olds with their hot little tan legs. So I stopped by the bookstore and I'm wearing my ASU shorts right now.
I still have white legs.
How did I wear spandex capris to the gym in Boise?
Friday, August 24, 2007
The Pictures Are Complete
http://gallery.mac.com/christin27
According to my dad, if you just ignore or close out the username and password, you don't have to enter it. Just double-click on the first three albums. The fourth one (with like 176 pictures) has a lot of blurry unrotated ones without labels that are duplicates of the others-- I just can't figure out how to delete it yet. The others are fun fun fun.
Love yall,
cc
Oh, and I lost a bunch of e-mail addresses when my computer died, so get me yours again!
Friday, August 17, 2007
Altered Ego
www.alteredegosalon.com
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Photo Album
Saturday
"Let's Smell All These People and Get Out of Here"
This is an actual quote from the top of the Empire State Building. The ESB does not close until 1 am, which is good for me and Brad, because it means we probably won't be late. One of the coolest things is that your ears start popping about the 20th floor and pop about 3 more times before you get to 86.
A few traveling tips:
1- If you are looking for romantic, pay the extra $15 and go to the 102nd floor. Or go closer to midnight. We went about 9 and it was jam-packed.
2- Go in a couple years when the construction is done.
3- Maybe bring a map
It was beautiful, even amidst all the craziness. We had a good time taking pictures of ourselves and some for other people. Brad had perfected his camera's functions by then, and this couple who happened to have pretty much the same camera asked us to take their picture. Brad messed around with it a bit and took an amazing picture of them. They were so excited.
There are a lot of languages spoken up there!!
Monday Night "If I give you $11..."
After having missed the last ferry, Brad-o took me home and made dinner for me and his roommate Jamison. Chicken, potatoes, corn. It was really good. We decided to hit up bloomingdales, saks 5th avenue (on 5th avenue), and bergdorf goodman, just because they were close and I thought the stores would be cool to see.
We got downtown at 8:05.
The stores close at 8:00.
Why on earth can you eat at Little Italy at 1am but not shop Saks after 8pm I have no idea.
H&M, however, was open. And that was a fun store I had always wanted to shop at. It was huge, but nothing I had to have.
Except a hoodie, because the hospital is really cold from 3am-5am. And they were having a sale on hoodies for $10 instead of $20 if you were buying denim. I found the perfect hoodie, but no jeans. But the guy behind me in line was buying jeans and no hoodie. So I gave him $11 and had him buy my hoodie for me. The girl behind the counter just about passed out when she realized we didn't know each other. We all ended up introducing ourselves.
Christin from AZ, Tim from Michigan, Essence from NY.
:o)
"There is No Free Parking in NJ" Monday, cont'd
Turns out, however, there is free parking at the Statue of Liberty after 4pm. Brad and I high-fived each other and were like "No Way!" As we pulled into the parking lot, I said, "Wouldn't it suck if the reason parking is free after 4pm is because no more ferries to the Statue of Liberty run after 4pm?"
The ferries quit running at 4:30.
We got there at 5.
Awesome.
Oh well.
There really is no free parking in NJ.
Do Not Drive in New Jersey. And Do Not Get Lost. Monday, August 6th
Today I drove a stick shift in NJ. Not by choice, necessarily. Brad is working in NJ/NY installing security systems, and he had to do one today. I tagged along, and decided to drive down the street to get some band-aids for my poor feet. Well, I got turned around as I often do and went on a 45 minute joy ride in the worst traffic ever. And I am terrible at driving stick. Lesson learned. I survived. I got back. I will never ever do that again.
Sunday, August 5th Central Park and Ground Zero
I finally remembered my camera this day, so I have some pictures of my own. Today we went to church in the Manhattan 8th ward. This may have also been the day I realized that the Lincoln Tunnel (and the Holland Tunnel) run UNDER the Hudson River.
Wow. I know that seems obvious to people who may actually know geography, but it wasn't to me, and it made all our rides through it seem that much cooler.
Anyway, so church was in a building 10 blocks from Times. Square and we took the elevator to the 3rd floor. The ward seemed cool, and everybody seemed to have so much style. I swear this place is like walking though a copy of Lucky magazine. :o)
Brad had packed us a lunch, so we sat and ate in the car. While we were eating, this guy walks over to the apartment near us with flowers and groceries and buzzed himself into his friends house. It seemed so out of a movie, so I totally papparazzied him and his picture is here.
Then we walked over to Ground Zero. Again, I thought a memorial had already been built, but apparently 6 years is a little overzealous on my part, and it basically looks like a big construction site at this point. Still, it was interesting to see.
Then we drove over to Central Park. We gave directions to two girls to the subway. Good directions. To Grand Central Station. From 5th Avenue. Across Madison Ave. To Park Ave. It felt so surreal and fun.
Central Park is amazing. Besides the beautiful fountains and stairs, it is so densely green and has such nice feeling to it. We walked around and watched these 40something black women double-dutch jump roping to music. They were so good. There were some crazy people too, but mostly very normal cool people. Sheep's meadow is where they have a lot of concerts, and when we went, there were people playing frisbee and soccer and stuff. Brad and I just sat and played with our cameras to take cool pictures of the skyline. Good day.
Clothes and Taxis
NYC Fashion Update:
I asked Brad what people wear in New York, and he was like, "I don't know..just regular clothes." People in New York wear a lot of skirts, sundresses, and khakis. And sandals and flip-flops. They do not wear jeans. I saw like 10 women wearing jeans the whole time I was there. Luckily, I had brought some skirts. That I wore with docs and/or tennis shoes because I was recovering from the blisters.
Taxis:
As cool as it sounds to take a NYC taxi, this is what it costs:
$2.50 to get in
40 cents a mile
40 cents a minute that you are stuck in traffic
We took pictures of the taxis. :o)
The Rest of Friday: HotDogs, The Subway, and The MET
In "Fools Rush In," Sala Hayek brings Matthew Perry Gray's Papaya Hot Dogs from New York City as a present. So we decided to try to find one. (Actually, I decided, and Brad was cool with whatever..) And the best way to get across town is on the subway. Brad had never been on it, and I was so excited. We actually had a little map now with the subway lines on it, so we got on the 4 train. Actually, we got on the 7 shuttle first (same direction, luckily)...I asked the guy next to me where we were, and he was like, "Grand Central Station," and I felt all giddy and excited inside for no particular reason (we didn't go upstairs at Grand Central Station until Monday...that's when I realized why I was excited). Anyways, so we continued on to the SoHo district, which I hear is great shopping, but we had hot dogs to find. I love "The Lower East Side." Walking through Greenwich (gren-itch, thank you Bekah) was one of my favorite parts of the trip. The street we were on (12th?) was so straight out of a movie. The thing abut NYC is that you are in a big huge city, but that's not necessarily the coolest part. The coolest part is that you feel like you are living history. I mean, these buildings are like 100 years old, and there are all these groups of people and the city just has so much character. I adored it. Absolutely adored it. So we found some cute places and finally found Gray's Papaya. And the hot dogs are just a buck each and are soo soo good. We also passed a bakery with fresh cookies and a line of people wrapped all the way around the corner. I took a picture, but we didn't wait.
Afterwards, we took the subway again to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We only spent an hour there because, well, they close at 9 and we got there at 8, so we only saw the Egyptian exhibit, but it was amazing and fun. Super cool building.
We rode the bus home. Just to say we did. Those pictures are cute. It was a very crowded bus, but the bus station was fun. Brad talked to a woman from Syracuse, and I talked to a guy from Oklahoma.
Friday, August 4th aka "Wow. These shoes are horrible."
A couple things:
1. People do not dress up to go to Broadway
2. People do not care what you wear in New York, as long as you don't wear heels. Then you get the weirdest looks ever.
Within 30 minutes I had the worst blisters in the history of the world, and those pictures are on Brad's camera, but they will definitely be posted. I stopped at the first shoe place I could find and bought some $15 flip-flops, which also ended up giving me two cuts and one huge blister, but still felt better than those horrible heels, which I am returning.
Anyways,
Lion King was wonderful. They amazingly let us in late and we sat on the stairs for a little bit so we didn't disturb anyone. The lighting was amazing, the stage and scenery were breathtaking, and the acting was phenomonal. Brad had never seen a live show and was so much more impressed than he thought he would be.
Good Times.
Back to NYC, August 3rd.
Some pictures will be a little delayed because they are stuck on a cd in my old computer. (the ones that brad took)
But back to the last entry...
So we went back to Brad's apartment and then took off to the city. Our destination was little Italy. People give terrible directions here. I didn't believe Brad at first, but it is true. It's like everyone's from a different place and they know they've seen a place once and it's "over in that direction."
So we ate dinner at Cafe Nepoli (?) at 1 am. It was so good, and such a fun little place. The waiters were like, "It's delicious. You no like it, you no pay."
We had an appetizer of baked clams, mussels, fried fresh mozzarella cheese sandwiches (heaven), shrimp, mushrooms, and eggplant. It was huge, but we were starving.
I had sea bass and Brad had Loster Ravioli. Such a fun first night!
It was raining really hard when I first got there, but it had just turned into a nice sprinkle by the time we ate, so we ate on the patio.
Macs are compatible/Can I put you on hold for a minute?
And my semi-horrible day yesterday...
Yesterday I woke up and called Sprint to try to get out of my early termination fee, in which I did not succeed. I waited 40 minutes to talk to this person and was a little upset. (The good thing is the guy who returned my wireless card at the Sprint store yesterday gave me a $200 credit for a free card, so I shut up about it.)
Next, I called to check on my loan and the guy told me I was declined because I had $10000 in overdue loans and just about freaked me out over my identity theft, until he realized the secretary had paper clipped somebody else's credit report to my loan application and he approved me over the phone because of my (actually) excellent credit.
Then I went to the bank and got pulled over for passing a cop. She gave me a warning but told me I needed to pay more attention while driving. I wanted to tell her I was already stressed out and that's why I wasn't really paying attention, but I didn't. Of course. I don't need any extra tickets.
Then I went to Verizon and got a new wireless card and for some reason my account was wrong and it took 30 minutes to get a new wireless card.
Then I decided all I wanted to do was get my eyebrows waxed and maybe the day wouldn't seem so bad. So I turned into a spa and my battery and brake lights went on. I went inside the spa anyway, but they were all booked for the day, so I called the one car place I know and they said it was probably the alternator but they couldn't look at it until tomorrow.
So I walked outside and started sobbing. I don't know if it was that on top of my computer dying or what, but it was the final straw. So I sobbed and sobbed. And said a little prayer and turned left into this hard-to-see auto place of super nice guys who replaced my alternator in an hour and a half.
And then I went to a church activity called "Cookies and Conversation" where we all just sit around and talk at someone's house and it was actually very fun.
So that was my stressful day.
And life is ok now.
And now I have found two good car places. Whoo-hoo!
cc
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
bv NV CCC? huh?
Sunday, August 12, 2007
Friday, Aug 3rd, 1st night
I got into JFK about 8pm. When I made my reservations, my mom was like, "Christin, more flights are delayed at JFK than any other place in the world." But, of course, a girl has to fly into JFK at least once in her life, so I did. And the flight was delayed. We sat on the runway for about 45 minutes. Which was okay, because traffic was horrible and Brad was late and called to tell me that if he ever had to make that drive again he would shoot himself in the head. Anyways, we finally met up and drove home. The thing is, Brad technically lives in New Jersey and NYC is huge, so a lot of this trip was spend wandering and driving aroound. bc v v v v v nv
NEW YORK IS SO COOL
Friday, August 03, 2007
Half Empty, Half Full
Wednesday could be looked at in a lot of different ways. It was my day off, and my big day to run errands before I go to New York on Friday :o)I need to get used to the fact that errands take a lot longer here and to just go with the flow. I really think it's easier, though, to go with the flow when you have someone around to deal with the crazy flow. But it helps to share. So this is my glass half-empty, glass half-full day.
Empty: My Service Engine Light was on and I had to go get it looked at before I could go do anything.
Full: The people were really nice, the cute guy there gave me a screwdriver and showed me where my distributor cap was, and it didn't cost a thing. (The monsoon puddle set it off.) And I had a killer breakfast burrito at Whataburger.
Empty: I had to go to the DMV 3 f-in' times before I finally got my car registered and my drivers' license. I had to drive like 7 miles away the 2nd time to go get my car emissions tested before they would register it. And I had to stop by my house because they only take cash or check.
Full: It's done. The girl who worked at the emissions place was from Salmon, ID, and was nice. It took me all the way back over to where I had been this morning (near Whataburger), but it was near another errand that my parents wanted me to do, so that got done, too.
Empty: I plan to make a tile mosaic under my washer and dryer because our lineoleum is horrible. So I called a tile store a week or so ago that said they had mismatched tile 20 for $1. Perfect. Today I drove like 15 miles to that tile store where a guy with a middle eastern accent looked at me like I was crazy and said they only stocked one pattern of tile in at all and he had no mismatched tile at all. He said there were no other tile stores in the area. I am still completely confused by this.
Full: Ok, really that's just an empty part of the day
Empty: I headed to the Chandler mall from the tile store. Turns out Chandler, AZ is Southwest of me, not Southeast. Just about a 30 minute detour.
Full: I stopped by a tanning salon to get directions to the mall. This, if you are wondering, is an excellent idea. The girl was not exactly a genius, but she gave me killer directions to the mall.
Full: The boxes above are from the Disovery Channel store, which is going out of business. Their fixtures were 50% off, and I bought both of these for $15. Brad has no bookshelves or endstands so we are going to refinish them for him. I was excited.
Full: MAC make-up lets you get a free lipstick if you recycle 6 empty containers. Unfortunately, their lipsticks look terrible on me. BUT! The nice girl at the mall told me that now the free-standing MAC stores (in Scottsdale, for example) will let you get either a lipstick, a lip gloss, OR an eyeshadow. This is fabulously exciting.
Full: I got a cute little white shirt from a store called A'GACI.
Empty: I spilled bright purple Acai juice on it when I put the bottle (empty, I thought, and closed) in the same bag with it.
Full: It came out
Full: I got all my grocery shopping done.
Empty: The people at Fry's are more than a little anal about getting out on time. When I said "hi" to the greeter, he said, "You have a half hour." THANKS. And then every FIVE minutes for a half an hour they announced that you should come to the front with your things because they were closing. And then I knocked over a display of froggie hair ties.
Full: I also got a water cooler for $90. I actually am just hoping this turns out to be a good idea.
Full: I went to the Post Office, sent Jess her CD's back, and Bekah had a job interview that went really well.
If it seems like this was the longest day ever, it was. I was gone for 13 hours.
And I'm going to New York tomorrow! Plenty of pictures when I get back.
Love y'all!
cc