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<editorsnote> Hi, I'm Jen Friel, and we here at TNTML examine the lives of nerds outside of the basements and into the social media, and dating world.  We have over 75 peeps that write about their life in real time. (Real nerds, real time, real deal.) Sit back, relax, and enjoy some of the stories!! </editorsnote>

 

 

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Entries in life caster (49)

Thursday
Dec092010

The best birthday ever meets the worst #hangover ever

 

Holy sweat falling off a monkey in heat, I am hungover.

I actually don't even think I would call this hungover, this is ... I don't know. I'm so fucking hungover I can't even think of something witty to say.

I got nothing. For reals though, the birthday wishes were just off the wall awesome sauce - thanks so so so much nerds for making this HANDS DOWN the best birthday everrrrrrrrr.

Dude, why is it that all my brain wants to do right now is flash me images of drinking? That's so horrible, brain. Stop it!!! Stop it!!! Or I'll kill you!!!!!!!!

#FML

 

 

Tuesday
Dec072010

That Nerdy Chick Wants a #Badass 

Oh goodness gracious, I had a date last night. It went really well ... however, the foreshadowing prior was a bit creepy. Dude, he totally posted on Facebook like 10 mins before he picked me up "about to do something that I NEVER do." WTH?! Again though, he has no idea my consumption of social media ... which I kinda dig as a novelty, but am also acutely aware that it can't last. I am testing some of my theories out on this dude. Is it sad that I will die lifecasting? We're just told so much bullshit in life, I'd rather use myself as this weird test tube subject to figure out if its actually accurate or not. I don't view it as sacrificial since I do very genuinely enjoy this dudes company ... however I feel like anytime you are testing something out, you can't fully be present. I'm always thinking, this happened ... this happened ... how can I tell this story? It's definitely not normal,  but if I enjoy it then I'm just going to keep going with it.

He came to the door, which literally shocked me. I can't even remember the last time anyone actually came to the front door of a dwelling I was inhabiting to pick me up for a date. No call, no text saying "hey I'm here ..." or worse, the honk of the horn. I'd want to say major brownie points, but I'm not that kinda gal. Opening a door, which he also does, does nothing for me. I have two capable arms that can open my own doors ... however if they ever become too exhausted, I wouldn't mind a door here or there opened. Then again let's keep it real, when are you EVER too tired to just open a damn door. Either way ... he's definitely a gentleman, but on me, that's neither here nor there.

I am 100% drawn to the badasses of the world. I don't want someone that oohs and aaahs at my day, I want someone who adds value by saying, wow you thought of that - did you try this? I like challenges, I like being on my toes, I like being pushed to be a better person or to try THAT much harder. Sick and twisted, but why do you think I am in love with Chuck Bass?? Cause and effect ... I get INCRREEDDIIBBLLEE mental stimulation out of what I do everyday, that if someone isn't willing to let go, bend some of the rules, and have some REAL fun with me ... I don't think I'd be game.

This guy is really sweet ... I'm seeing him again this week, but he doesn't have a lot of life experience. I'm 25 almost 26 and they're already basing a TV show off of mine. Albeit, I know that's an EXTREME set of circumstances ... its still my constant.

I told him not to read the site, so I could explore a few things that I was feeling about him on here. We'll see if he listens. I told him that I'm freakishly good at reading faces, so I will know either way ... dude, its so awkward when you know someone has read something you tweeted, or posted - and they go "oh wow ... " or whatever in response. I know you read it, and now I'm reading your face knowing that you read it, and you're pausing slightly now thinking that I know that you know that I read it.

Um yeah.

 PS. He was an AAMAAZINNGGG cook btw. Like for reals, I'm still not entirely convinced there wasn't a box somewhere from the groccery store hiding in the trash. It was insane. Being a good cook = major.major.majoorrrrr brownie points!


Monday
Dec062010

Date #2 with Bachelor #DontRemindMe

I'm currently getting ready for date number two with bachelor number, please for the love of all things holy don't remind me.

Rockin my NKOTB original concert tee circa 1992 from Buffalo Exchange, boyfriend jeans, and my holier than thou polka dotted tennis shoes.

He's cooking me dinner, and then we're headed out to see Black Swan. Which looks soooooooo good!! Was supposed to go to a screening of it last week at Fox. Was SUPER sad that I missed it ... but yay life for being so abundant.

I love it when a guy cooks me dinner. I can't cook ... at all. Well, I make mean desserts, and some pretty obscure shit ... but I grew up with a family of amazing cooks. I learned not to bother. Home cooked meals = fastest way to my heart. For reals ...

Super stoked. This dude is pretty chill. On the first date he was like - I had no idea what you do, and from the sounds of it, I really didn't want to know until we had the chance to talk about it. I get it ... I asked him out, the whole heart of everything that I do is weird to a lot of people ... but I jive with it.

I met this dude IRL; he's an anomaly. I interact with hundreds of people everyday in social media. What are the odds that I would meet someone off the grid? Kinda rad ... but either way, I find myself in a unique position now to be able to test out some theories on dating. HAHA! Poor soul, hopefully he'll survive.

Can't wait to find out either way ...

PS. My chapstick tonight is from Univision. It's acai berry and literally the most disgusting thing I have ever tried. It tastes almost like it should be chocolate, but some marketing person said acai berry is good for weight loss so chicks will buy into it faster ...  *smf* damn you Univision!!!

 

Sunday
Dec052010

Why #gratitude isn’t for wimps

For the last 2 weeks or so, I have just been overwhelmed with gratitude. For reals ... I can literally feel it pumping through my veins and saturating my soul. It's incredibly intense. I am turning into such a chick, and have been tearing up at the thought of how awesome life is when you make a conscious effort to just be happy. That's it. Period end of sentence. Does this feel good? Why are we so conditioned to over complicate things with fear and insecurity. Crazy ... anywhooo stumbled upon this, thought you would all appreciate.

Per Futurity: Compared with those who dwell on daily hassles, people who take time instead to record their reasons for giving thanks exercise more regularly, complain of fewer illness symptoms, and feel better about their lives overall. They also feel more loving, forgiving, joyful, enthusiastic, and optimistic about their futures, while their family and friends report that they seem happier and are more pleasant to be around.

“Gratitude is literally one of the few things that can measurably change people’s lives,” Robert Emmons writes in his book Thanks! How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier. The book outlines 10 strategies for cultivating a feeling of thanksgiving throughout the year.

Emmons, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis, and Michael McCullough, a psychology professor at the University of Miami, are gathering a large body of novel scientific data on the nature of gratitude, its causes, and its potential consequences for human health and well-being.

“Scientists are latecomers to the concept of gratitude,” Emmons says. “Religions and philosophies have long embraced gratitude as an indispensable manifestation of virtue, and an integral component of health, wholeness, and well-being.”

Gratitude was unexplored terrain for psychologists when Emmons began studying it in 1998. His first research subjects were students in his health psychology class at UC Davis.

Then, the professor assigned some students to write down five things they were thankful for each day and others to record five complaints. Three weeks later, the grateful students reported measurable improvements in psychological, physical and social well-being compared with their complaining classmates.

Since then, Emmons has conducted variations of the experiment in dozens of other study populations, including organ transplant recipients, adults with chronic neuromuscular disease, and healthy fifth-graders.

“We always find the same thing,” he says. “People who keep gratitude journals improve their quality of life.”

Emmons says his 10 strategies can help anyone cultivate a more grateful approach to life. But he warns that the exercises are not for the “intellectually lethargic.” And he stresses that gratitude is incompatible with feelings of victimhood or entitlement, or with the inability to recognize one’s shortcomings or to admit one is not self-sufficient.

“Far from being a warm, fuzzy sentiment, gratitude is morally and intellectually demanding,” he says. “It requires contemplation, reflection, and discipline. It can be hard and painful work.”

Here are Emmons’ evidence-based prescriptions for becoming more grateful:

  • Keep a gratitude journal. Write down and record what you are grateful for, and then when you need to reaffirm your good lot in life, look back on the journal.
  • Remember the bad. If you do not remind yourself of what it was like to be sick, unemployed, or heartbroken, you will be less likely to appreciate health, your job, or your relationship.
  • Ask yourself three questions every evening. Fill in the blanks with the name of a person (or persons) in your life. What have I received from ___? What have I given to ___? What troubles and difficulty have I caused ___?
  • Learn prayers of gratitude. One Emmons suggests in his book from the Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh: Waking up this morning, I see the blue sky. I join my hands in thanks; for the many wonders of life; for having 24 brand-new hours before me.
  • Appreciate your senses. One approach: Practice breathing exercises.
  • Use visual reminders. For example, Emmons has a refrigerator magnet in his home bearing this quote from Eleanor Roosevelt: “Yesterday is history, tomorrow is mystery … today is a gift.”
  • Make a vow to practice gratitude. “Swearing a vow to perform a behavior actually does increase the likelihood that the action will be executed,” the psychologist notes.
  • Watch your language: It influences how you think about the world.
  • Go through the motions. Research shows that emotions can follow behavior.
  • Be creative. Look for new situations and opportunities in which to feel grateful, especially when things are not going well.

Though he practices these techniques, Emmons acknowledges that maintaining an attitude of thanksgiving is hard work even for him.

“Most psychologists study what they’re bad at,” he says.

However, his long study of the subject has convinced him that Cicero had it right centuries ago. The Roman philosopher ranked gratitude as the chief virtue, parent of all the others.

#nerdsunite

Sunday
Dec052010

Cartoon characters on #Facebook

#TalkNerdyToMeLover's @JenSquard

I guess it's the Jen2 show today!  I'm okay with it!

As anyone with a FB page (and honestly, who in the world doesn't have one of those by now?  Get with it, people!) has noticed, everyone is changing their profile pic to a cartoon character from their childhood.  Apparently this is to help end child abuse or some such nonsense.  The other thing I have noticed is all of the haters saying things like "change your profile picture to one of your favorite nard to help fight testicular cancer.  That's how much sense you are all making with this cartoon crap." 

Here's the thing, I don't honestly think that changing my profile picture to Captain Planet (which I totally did, he is our hero, you know) will end child abuse.  And I don't think that 8,000,000 people doing it will either.  I do think that it just might bring a little bit of awareness to the issue, and even if it is just a tiny bit of awareness, which is bound to happen, that is more awareness than it had before.  There are a bajillion causes out there, and a bajillion silly things that people do across social media to get them noticed.  Most of them don't take off, some of them do (remember the bra color thing?  National news worthy.), and this one certainly has.  

And is there really anything wrong with being part of a community once in a while?  Isn't that, at it's most basic level, what social media is all about?  Being part of a huge community that connects all walks of life across the world?  I'm certainly not saying that we have to bend and sway with the whims of Facebook, but it's all in good fun, and banding together, even if it's just to relive a little moment from childhood, can't be a bad thing.  I am really enjoying seeing the cartoon choices of my friends.  I have always been a big Captain Planet fan, although I feel the show came before its time.  @JenFriel went with Penny from Inspector Gadget.  My best friend did My Little Pony (not surprising since she owns several horses of her own).  I feel like it says a lot about people, and I am enjoying the opportunity.  From what it looks like the cartoon thing is going to end tomorrow, so to all of you that didn't participate, you won't have to suffer through it much longer.  Next time, try joining in, you might discover a connection that wasn't there before.

What was your cartoon character? Tell me over at @JenSquard

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