Saturday, April 21, 2012

Readathon Update (and dog update-she's a chipmunk)


So, Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon.  I've been reading since about 10 AM and have finished one book and have about 150 pages left in another.  I've been really preoccupied with my dog today though.

I came home from work yesterday evening and one side of her face was really puffy.  This morning I called the vet.  They seemed sure it was a bee sting or something, but now I'm not so sure.  I'm not giving her any more antibiotics until the swelling goes down.  The vet told me over the phone to give her 50mg of Benadryl pills two times a day.  So obviously I've only so far given her her first dose.  But the swelling has now moved to her other cheek, and she looks like a pitiful chipmunk dog.  Poor thing.  I'm super worried about her but the vet didn't really seem concerned. 

I don't really trust our vet anymore but I guess I can't talk because my mom is the one who pays the bills......  I have to call them back on Monday morning because they are closed the rest of the weekend.  I'm just praying that the swelling goes down soon and my poor baby doesn't need to go to the doggy hospital if it gets worse. 

So, I am having a bit of a hard time focusing on reading right now.  But I will at least get the book I'm currently reading finished. 

Hope any of you participating in the readathon are having a fun time!


Sunday, April 15, 2012

A Little Explanation

I have not been doing much blogging or reading at all the past couple of weeks and I thought an explanation was in order.  My lovely dog and my best friend in the whole world has been sick on and off for the last few weeks.  She's on her second dose of antibiotics, and we're hoping they help and that she's just got an infection and nothing more serious <3  I've been sitting with her and focusing all of my attention on her.  I may not be doing much on the internet until she's doing better.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Review: The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin


I'm sure most of you have at least heard a bit about The Happiness Project.  I mean, for a while there it was a super popular book.  I finally read and it really enjoyed it.  And if you can believe this, it was actually even happier than I thought it would be.  Let me explain.  In this memoir, Gretchen Rubin sets out to be a happier person every day.  I was worried that this decision had been made after something terrible had happened, or something like that.  Because I think it's rare that people think about happiness when they are happy.  But Gretchen had a great life already when she started her happiness project.  She just wanted to be even happier, and to stop the random snappiness that she'd sometimes get (I also will randomly and for no real reason get snappy with people I love..).  There was a point in the book where Gretchen mentions how she's nervous that people who have been through really hard times might think the book was stupid.  Like, you're already so happy, why try to be even happier?!  As someone who has been through hard times, like the death of my father three years ago, I can honestly say that I was SO refreshed by her take on happiness.  I was not the least bit bitter that she was trying to focus more on her current happiness.

You see, she explains how she wants to harness her happiness and learn what makes her happy and how to make herself happy before something bad happens, so that she is prepared and can once again find happiness after said bad event.  I myself have always been a super happy, positive person, so when I had hard times, I was able to find my way back to being a generally happy person.  Happy all the time?  No.  But I'm not one of those people who has something bad happen and then continues to sulk on the couch for the rest their lives. 

So I agree with Gretchen's tactics wholeheartedly.

And I'm sorry if I just repeated myself a ton and if it's hard to understand what I'm trying to get at.

One of my favorite of Gretchen's tactics for being happy was to act like your happy.  She's argues that if you pretend to be happy and put a smile on your face, eventually you will actually start to feel happy.  I know that for myself this is 100% true, and I loved reading about Gretchen's experience trying this out.

I also really liked how Gretchen used real examples of what she was doing for her happiness project in her real life.  She refers to her family a lot and her daily life with them and what she was trying to do with them, and it made me feel more connected to her and her project. 

I think this is a fun, inspirational book.  I really liked it, though I don't think I'd recommend it to anyone who is currently super depressed and going through a super hard time.  It's a bit too happy for that.  Wait until you're more on the mend and starting to have a more positive outlook on life once again.  And don't worry, be happy :)

For more info on the author and starting your own happiness project, check out http://www.happiness-project.com/

I just adored this quote on the first page by Robert Louis Stevenson: There is no duty we so much underrate as the duty of being happy.