Friday, September 12, 2008

  • Do you know what's really expensive? Paper. We go through scads of it at work, what with bulletins, announcements, newsletters, etc etc etc. I had to order some yesterday because the parish administrator is gone. The order was something like $500, and most of that was regular old paper. I'd say maybe $60 was the colorful, fun stuff.
  • So, I, of course, think I'm being all coy with this not being publicly pregnant yet gig. And some woman I don't know comes up to me at the gym and says, "You're working out through your pregnancy? That's great." I laughed really loudly because it made me nervous (note: not all my loud laughs are because I'm nervous, but this one definitely was).
  • I'm disturbed by our country and the elections. When I heard Palin was the VP candidate for McCain, I thought, "No one's going to fall for that!" I'm beginning to wonder if I gave America too much credit.
  • I went to the dentist on Wednesday. We couldn't make my next six month appointment six months out because it would have been a day before my due date. I stared at the hygenist in horror and disbelief.
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Book Update:

I was hoping to reach fifty books for the year. I think I'll just barely do it. What's that, about three a month (for the months I have left, I mean)? Work has basically exploded. A significant number of people seem to have lost their mind/cool/health/live all at the same time. We've done four funerals in the past three weeks, and the list of people in critical pastoral care situations is abnormally high for us. Plus the rector is gone next week on continuing education. I've kept my schedule relatively clear next week, knowing that there will be more than enough to do even if all remains somewhat calm.
  • Book #33: The Art of Eating, MFK Fischer. Collection of food writings for early twentieth century important food writer. I loved her recollections of what different meals had meant in her own life in the section "The Gastronomical Me."
  • Book #34: Prodigal Summer, Kingsolver. Read it in two days. The story's set in the Appalachians, and the characters are well written.
  • Book #35: Garden Spell, Sarah Addison Allen. New author from NC. Again, fiction set in western NC. It was about the relationships of some people around my age, so it was interesting. Not this most thought provoking read in the world, but I enjoyed reading it.
  • Lots of pregnancy related stuff: #36: What to Expect When You're Expecting (no), #37: The Girlfriend's Guide to Pregnancy (eh-- some of it liked, some of it was garbage), #38: The Mayo Guide to a Healthy Pregnancy (good).

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was amazed at how "What to Expect" basically told you to expect to be afraid. Very afraid. Of everything. Raw fish, wine, blood, purple baby poop, whatever.

(FOr more practical matters, like th equipment, I really liked Baby Bargains. And when you get to the point of wanting to understand how the baby actually works, I'd recommend Baby 411.)

kwpershey said...

I had the same Sarah Palin reaction - surely the American people will see past this. But now maybe they're starting to come around...

My favorite pregnancy book was the William & Martha Sears one... I think it's called The Pregnancy Book. I like their Baby Book too. I like their point of view - they're a little to the left of the mainstream pregnancy/baby industry, but not to the point they expect you to have your baby at home in the bathtub.

Lastly, I just recently discovered MFK Fischer, too. I poked around in her anthology, and while I didn't read the whole thing, i really liked what I read.