Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Drumroll please.......

So today I'm super tired, so I'm going to keep this short because I see bedtime in the very near future, never mind that it's only 7:30... You have to understand because this week my mom was out of town, which means that I got to be "mom" on Monday and Tuesday to my three younger siblings who are still at home. This may sound easy, but I promise you, it's totally not. Let's pull out our timeline again.

7:15 a.m. Wake up Emma for school
7:20 Feed Emma and and self, brush Emma's hair.
7:30 Wash and dress self
7:45 Make sure Emma has everything for school
7:50 Take Emma and puppies out to the bus stop.
7:59 Emma's bus finally comes
8:00 Wait for puppies to pee.
8:05 Still waiting.
8:06 Puppies finally pee!
8:07 Give puppies treat
8:10 Start work
9:30 Stop work, leave to take Caleb to rehab appt.
10:00-12:00 Caleb at rehab, me working in the waiting area.
12:15 p.m. Arrive at Wegmans :)
12:23 Eat delicious Wegman's chinese food (and maybe a few other foods)
12:45 Leave Wegmans
1:10 Arrive at home
1:15 Work some more
3:15 PANIC. Discover Caleb has to be at play practice and Eli needs to be picked up at school—both at 3:30.
3:29 Drop off Caleb and friend at play practice
3:34 Pick up Eli at school
3:35 Race home to beat Emma's bus
3:47 FAIL. Missed Emma's bus by 2 minutes. The one day it had to come early. Luckily, I left her a note that she found on the kitchen counter, so she was not scarred for life by coming home to an empty house.
3:50 Work some more
5:25 Finish work
5:26 Frantically try to put marinating chicken meat and vegetables on kabob skewers
5:43 Put kabobs in fridge.
5:45 Pile everyone in the van to take Eli to saxophone lesson
6:00 Play Monopoly Deal with Emma in the van while we wait for Eli to finish lesson. Caleb and friend find us after their play practice.
6:45 Arrive back at home
6:46 Try to pull together dinner as fast as possible
6:47 Realize there is no propane in the gas tank to start the grill
6:50 Dad arrives home.
6:55 Dad goes to Sears to refill propane tank.
7:20 Dad finally arrives home with propane tank. Let the grilling commence. Eat some chocolate covered raisins to keep from fainting
7:45 Finally time to eat dinner.
8:15 Fullness and exhaustion hit. Realize that I still need to pack for DC :(
8:30 Packing, laundry, various miscellaneous tasks.
10:30 p.m. Finally, bedtime.

So that was my day yesterday. My blood pressure rises just typing out my ridiculously day. And then I woke up at 5:15 this morning, drove three hours to the office, and worked a 7 hour day. So yes, a I think I might be entitled to my tiredness.

Anyways, I need to get to the point. I've got some SERIOUSLY EXCITING NEWS!!!!! Get ready....... (drum rolllll).....

I'M PUBLISHING A FEATURE ARTICLE FOR THE MAGAZINE!

Yes, that's right! Remember how I told you the other day about how the senior editor asked me what I would like to write about in the magazine? Well, I wrote about something awesome, and she thought it was a great idea! So they are going to publish it as one of their FEATURE articles in either the November or December issue of the magazine!!! WAHOOOOO! So not only am I finally going to be a published author (one of my new year's resolutions, by the way), but I will be a published author BEFORE I graduate college, and it is going to be one of their main feature articles! They only do about 3 a month, and they are usually about 6 pages long! I get my own 6 pages in an international magazine!!! This is way cooler than them using my title for one of the feature articles next month...

In case you can't tell, I'm a little bit excited. I've known about it since Friday, but I've literally been either too crazy busy or too exhausted to tell the world about it. Crazy, right? I've told just a handful of people so far, but really not many. And now you know my crazy cool news!

Today I worked on my feature article some more: I'm trying to pull together a couple of interviews to include. I also transcribed an interview for our editor, made a zillion copies of the entries for our Project Centerline contest, and worked on a book review that I'm doing.

And now I'm very tired. I think my mattress is calling my name :) Lllindsayyyyyyy....

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Some Fun Photos from my DC Adventures Today

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Some more awesome writing assignments, one heck of a lot of traffic, a couple friends, and a few historic landmarks.


Today was an exciting day. I slept in just a tad this morning (about 10 minutes longer than usual), so I got to the office about, well, 10-ish minutes later than I usually get in. Lucky for me, my internship isn't paying me a dime and I was actually still in the office before the rest of the editors. And I left after them today as well, and I let almost an hour earlier than I usually do... Much of the usual went on today at the magazine. I worked on one of my new assignments and gave it back to the editor, who was thoroughly stunned because she had given me the project with the idea that it will take me the larger part of this week and next. Goodness, do they think I'm retarded or do they just not understand how fast college students can get work done? In my world, the faster I can get my work done, the more free time I have. I'm not exactly sure that same principle always applies in the business world, at least not from what I've seen. They are expected to fill 9-5 and they don't feel much of a fire to get things done quickly. I had a similar experience last week when the managing editor gave me an assignment and it took me less than half the time she thought it would. The only problem with my efficiency is that I keep running out of things to do... I'm literally begging all 3 of the editors for more assignments on an almost daily basis. If I didn't keep bugging them constantly, I'd be stuck twiddling my thumbs all day. Today I even took my time and got distracted a bit, but I still finished more than what I'd been assigned.

I also continued to work on some of the pieces that I got to choose the topic. However, this story ends sort of tragically. I finished the one article I was working on and since I'm waiting for more feedback on that one, I started a second. I finished this one near the end of the day, but part way through writing it I realized I'd saved it in the wrong spot, so I dragged a copy from its current location to my desktop, and then finished writing. Afterward, I saved the document and then deleted the one that I had accidentally saved to the server. The trash bin said that the action would permanently delete my file, but I clicked OK feeling I was safe because of the copy on my desktop. I was wrong. It turns out that my finished copy saved only to the location on the server, and the one on my desktop was the partially finished draft that I had when I dragged a copy to my desktop. I lost 2/3 of my article. I almost cried. So tomorrow, I get to go back and rewrite the majority of my article that I accidentally deleted—not looking forward to that.

I left the office about 45 minutes earlier than usual because I went to meet my friend Jamie and his sister Laura in DC for the evening. I knew it would take me a while to get into the city because of the ridiculous traffic in this area, but I must admit that I was pretty unaware that you could take what should be a 37-minute drive according to Google Maps and turn it into a nail-biting, hair-wrenching, 75 minute ordeal—turns out, you can! But I have to admit that once my car was successfully parked in a beautiful, end parking spot on Jefferson Ave that was completely FREE so long as I kept it there under 3 hours and stepped out onto the National Mall with the 70-degree weather and sunny blue skies, I think the drive was almost worth it. It was supposed to rain this afternoon, but it turned out to be a beautiful sunny day with the most perfect temperature. It was pretty much like heaven. When I met up with Jamie and Laura, we headed over to the Natural History Museum where I discovered what I would have looked like as a Neanderthal. And for your viewing pleasure, I've provided the picture below.


It's pretty spectacular. Let's just say, I'm glad I was born about 3 million years after some of our early ancestors, because I just don't think that the receding hairline would have been a very flattering look for me.

After I got this horrifying picture made up, I saw a giant squid that was not completely submerged in its preservation juices (why he wasn't completely im-
mersed, I don't know), a few dinosaurs, and lot of really big, really expensive diamonds and rare gems. When the Natural History Museum kicked us out, we took a nice stroll to the Washington Monument and contemplated the best escape route should the monument start to fall over or crumble to the ground. All in all, it was a pretty great day, and it was nice to get out of Gaithersburg and see some of the amazing places around me. Even though the traffic stinks, it is so beautiful around here. This is a picture I took when I stopped at a "scenic overlook" on my drive home two weeks ago. All in all, this has been an amazing experience and a pretty fun week. And tomorrow, it's back home again for a relaxing weekend.


Wednesday, May 18, 2011

I forgot my PJs—AGAIN.

So last night, instead of waiting until about 10 p.m., I started packing my bags for DC before dinner. By 9:45, I was in bed and the majority of my belongings were already packed neatly inside the car. I had even left myself a little note in the bathroom with a few lingering items that I wanted to be sure I didn't leave behind in the morning. I was feeling rather self-congratulatory at this point, and I even bragged to my mom about my preparedness. I even had all my meals planned out and packed for my time away. For the first time in 4 weeks, I was going to leave the house on time—and I wasn't going to forget anything.

I know now that pride is a sin. I left the house this morning more or less on time, feeling confident that I had packed the things I needed, and I arrived at the office in under 3 hours—an all-time record. I was doing pretty good. This feeling of confidence sustained me throughout the day. It wasn't until I left the office and opened my suitcase at the house I'm staying at that I realized I didn't pack any pajamas. I had put my favorite pair in the wash yesterday, and because I didn't need to pack any of the other clothes in that load of laundry, I forgot completely forgot to pack the PJs. Now, anyone who has ever roomed with me can tell you that as soon as I come home for the day, I immediately change into sweats or Pjs. The reason for this is twofold: (1) I wear my jeans multiple times between washings and if I take them off sooner, they have a decreased time to get dirty and/or stretched out, and (2) I like to be comfy. So after I finished eating the leftovers I had packed for dinner, my heart sunk as I realized that I didn't remember packing my Pjs, and that fear was confirmed when I unzipped my bag and discovered with was PJ-less. Luckily, I overpacked in almost every other way possible, and I had tossed a pair of exercise pants in my bag (just in case I felt the urge to get in shape, an urge which hasn't presented itself even remotely in the 4 weeks I've been coming down here). The work out pants are very similar to my PJs, and I had also packed an extra t-shirt that I knew when I packed it that I wouldn't wear it to the office but decided to pack it anyway—thank goodness.

Aside from the realization of my omission of sleepwear, my day went very well. Like I mentioned before, I managed to make it to the office in record time—under 3 hours, and that included filling up on gas! I even almost decided to do the drive without the help of my often-confused, semi-helpful GPS (although I decided to give it one more week). My new friend (intern, Rachel) was again at the office and she greeted me in her usual sun-shiny way, which made me feel happy to be there.

I got to do more indexing today (yay—not) but I finished that in record time as well. I then received a few more projects, including an editing assignment, a photo-downloading assignment (which ended up being somewhat stressful), and a new writing assignment. Today the senior editor asked me what topics I would like to write about for the magazine. I must say, I was taken a little off-guard. In fact, I was pretty speechless, which very rarely ever happens to me. What did I want to write about? Oh man. There were so many possibilities, that literally, my mind went blank, and to tell you the truth, I looked kind of stupid. She suggested I brainstorm a couple of topic ideas and then discuss them with her to flush them out for ideas. She encouraged me to write about stuff that I knew all about, stuff that came easily to me and that I didn't need to do hardly any research on. She wanted the pieces to be slightly more conversational. I brainstormed a bit, ran some ideas by her, and then wrote one of the articles. I liked it, but I'm not sure yet what she thought of it, so I'm waiting for some of her feedback. Tomorrow I'm going to work on a couple more of those ideas.

So in my belated post, I talked about how I did my first real editing last week, and how I came up with a new title for that one article. Well, I looked at the InDesign documents for the July issue and it looks like my title is going to stick! I'm not sure if much else of my editing stuck (actually, I was a little annoyed to see that a lot of it didn't) but they like the title! And it's going to be on the cover of our July issue! Hooray! I know it may seem like a relatively small victory, but for me it's kind of a big deal. It will be the first time that something I came up with will be in print that thousands of people will read. Now I just need to get my byline...

I also was invited to attend my first event with the magazine staff! On June 3 the Young Horse Trials are being held at Morven Park, which is an international horse park in Leesburg, VA, only a 30-minute drive from the office. So today the senior editor asked me if I would be around that day so I could go with them :) I have no idea what we are going to do all day or if we plan on covering the event in the magazine, but I do know that it will be an entire day at a horse not as a rider, not as a spectator, but as a member of the press. It sounds pretty good to me! I'll make sure to take pictures when I go.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Belated Update: Blogger status is "unavailable." To me, that translates to "unacceptable." Also, real editing and a new friend!

I must first apologize for this belated blog post. I can honestly say that it wasn't my fault—it was blogger's. It goes like this:


I am finally getting roped into this blogging thing. I can say that at first, I was a bit of skeptic. I just didn't understand the need for a blog if I already have a facebook, and after a few failed attempts at blogging, I started to think it was not really for me. However, since I'm in college I thought it was only right to give it the good old college try—I decided to try blogging one more time while I was doing my internship, mostly so that I would have a journal of sorts for myself when I was finished. Then last Thursday night, I got home from my internship and had had such a great day that I was very excited to blog all about it, but to my intense disappointment, blogger said it was "currently unavailable" when I typed in the URL address. I couldn't believe it–once I'd finally decided I couldn't make it another minute without blogging, the blogger site decided to be "unavailable," whatever that means. And blogger was "currently unavailable" all night long. Can you believe it? In vain, I frantically checked the website about every 3-10 minutes for about 4 hours. A little pathetic, I'm aware.


So anyway, that is the reason that this post is somewhat belated. And unfortunately, I'm pretty sure this entry will not be as vibrant as it would have been if I had written it the day of like I'd planned because the memories have a had a few days to sit and get dusty in my brain. But last Thursday was a great day! On Wednesday, I mentioned that we had a new intern. And on Thursday, we officially became friends! Her name is Rachel, so if you read about a Rachel in future blog posts, that’s probably who I’m talking about. We had a nice chat on Thursday and she is super nice. She is from South Carolina, at least her parents live there and she goes to college down there, but her family moved around her senior year in high school from Spokane Washington! I told her that I had a lot of Spokane friends, so that was a fun connection. But she is living with some family friends as well while she is doing the internship so she also doesn’t know anyone or anything in the area. We are in the same boat! So she said that we would have to be friends and hang out in the evenings after work. And that’s how I made a new friend! It was pretty great.


I also got my first real editing assignment on Thursday. It’s crazy how I could be in my third week of my editing internship and not have edited anything yet. I guess that’s why editing is so exciting because it encompasses so many different things. But the head editor came up to me near the end of the day and asked me to read through one of their feature articles that they are going to run in the July issue because the other editors were having trouble with a good head and deck for the article (the head is the title, and the deck is the brief, catchy explanation of the article just below the title). I read through the article in what was supposed to be a relatively simple assignment, but I discovered that I was having the same difficulty coming up with a good title. I then realized that the main problem was not the title, but the organization and focus of the article—it was a mess! It was hard to come up with a good title because the different parts of the article were wandering in focus. I mentioned the problem and my proposed solution to the editor, and she told me she thought I was right and asked if I would mind making the changes myself. I was thrilled, of course, to have my first real editing assignment. Together, the editor and I (her name is Patty) brainstormed a bit about titles and I came up with something truly brilliant (and sort of deep—but then that’s the English major in me). I can’t tell you what it is yet, and we will just have to wait until the July issue is published to see if the title ends up sticking. I think it just might. I also added a bit to the article, so I’m kind of hoping for a byline, which would be so cool because this is one of the big feature articles. I’ll keep you posted about what happens with the piece.


I got the chance to do some more real editing again on Friday. I JUST LOVE EDITING. I really do. It is just so exciting and there are so many possibilities. Words are fun. All in all, it was a pretty great week. I hope this week ends up being just as good.


I’m sorry if this post was a little more boring than usual, but again, I think we can blame blogger. Cross your fingers that blogger isn’t down at all this week. I’m just not sure I could handle it again!

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Pizza Makes it Official

Thanks to a BBQ chicken pizza and a cup of diet coke, I've now been officially welcomed to the staff of Dressage Today Magazine. Who knew pizza had such power? I sure didn't.

Today, the editors of the magazine decided to take me out to lunch to officially welcome me to the staff of the magazine. It was a total surprise and I thought it was very thoughtful—and very delicious. There are some restaurants in the business complex where we have our office and we had lunch at one of them and I ordered a relatively delicious BBQ chicken pizza that was deceptively labeled as a "small" pizza, even though it was definitely big enough for two very full meals. The managing editor came up to me this morning after I got in (I will shortly tell you all about my once again eventful morning) and asked me if it would be okay if the editors took me out to lunch. I was thinking, well sure it's okay for you to take me out and feed me free food. She then asked it 12:30 was an okay time, and I'm thinking, what else would I have going on? You guys are the ones who dictate my schedule and give me assignments... So yes, a little bizarre, but still very nice of them to check with my busy schedule. I assured her that I could put my mailing address labeling aside long enough for them to feed me. We talked about horses pretty much the whole time—the other people in the restaurant must have thought we were crazy as we were 4 fully-grown women out to lunch talking about horses. I thought it was great. They gave me some networking tips about how to get a job in equine journalism after graduation, which I thought was great but I was also thinking yeah, it would just be super nice if you hired me in a few months... so we will see how that works out.

The rest of the day I spent mastering the mail machine, writing more articles, writing addresses on labels for our comp issues, and glorying in the fact that I am no longer the newby. That's right—there is a new intern with Practical Horseman who just started this week, which means that I'm officially not the newest person in the office! I felt so special, so seasoned, so knowledgeable. It was pretty awesome. And on top of all those things, I felt loved because I got fed pizza. All in all, it turned out to be a pretty good day, which is a miracle because this is how my day started:

Actually, in the grand tradition of Wednesday posts, I'm going to continue with my timeline, starting with Tuesday night.

Tuesday
3:50 p.m. - Get Emma off the school bus.
4:00-4:50 Feed Emma snack, put in more time for work (I'm working from home for my job that I have out in Utah).
4:50 Drive to Eli's baseball game at the high school.
5:00-5:50 Watch Eli's game.
6:00 Pick up pizza from dinner on way home from game.
6:15 Arrive at home with pizza.
6:15-6:30 Eat dinner
6:30-6:38 Change for Eli's concert.
6:40 Leave for Eli's concert
6:50 Arrive at Eli's concert. Realize I left the camera at home that I need to record the concert because mom and dad are out of town.
6:55 Drive home to get camera.
7:15 Arrive back at school for concert.
7:30-9:15 Eli's concert.
9:30 Arrive at home, get Emma ready for bed, clean up kitchen, do laundry.
10:15 Put Emma to bed
10:30 Pack for DC.
11:15 Write out instructions for babysitter (mom and dad are gone all week so I had to leave instructions and driving directions for the babysitter for the rest of the week).
11:40 p.m. Crawl into bed/Sleepies.

Wednesday
5:00 a.m. Alarm goes off. Hit Snooze button.
5:05 a.m. Alarm goes off again. Accidentally turn alarm off.
5:35 a.m. Wake up in a panic realizing I turned off alarm
5:40-6:40 Frantically get ready, shower, put bags in car.
6:40 Phone rings, dad is calling.
6:43 Get in car to leave. My clutch feels weird and my car keeps getting stuck when I try to shift. Drive off in car anyway hoping that if I ignore the problem, it will got away and my car will magically make it all the way to DC.
6:55 Realization that my car really is not driving right. Mild panic and struggle getting car to work at all. Decide to take car home and drive minivan to DC.
7:05 Arrive at home, move bags/GPS to minivan. Wake up Emma for school. Get in minivan and drive off again.
7:13 Realize that I forgot my EasyPass. Turn around to go back home AGAIN.
7:20 Arrive at home again. Grab EasyPass out of my car, get back in minivan and drive off.
7:30 Fill up on gas. $59 to not even fill the tank all the way! Mild heart attack.
7:45 Call dad again, he tells me that there was an EasyPass in the car the whole time. Urge to scream and punch.
7:45-10:15 Took new route to the office and it is MAGICAL. It takes me only 3 hours start to finish and there is virtually NO TRAFFIC! Even during rush hour! Finally something is going right.
10:15 a.m. Arrive at office and get right to work.

So yes, that was my morning. I might have screamed and/or complained loudly to myself in the van the SECOND time I had to turn around and go home, and I was a bit disappointed to finally be leaving about an hour and 15 min later than I'd hoped, but everything turned out okay. And there was an added perk to taking the minivan: it has satellite radio, which means that when I was driving through the middle of nowhere, I still got great music and I didn't have to hunt through channels when I entered a new state! Horray!

I've now had dinner and I'm very tired, so I think I might be totally irresponsible and play Angry Birds and watch some Harry Potter and then go to bed at like 9ish. It's going to be a good night. And the beauty of tomorrow is that I don't have a three-hour drive. Yessss.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

A few more arguments with technology and a new appreciation for magazine covers

When I left the office today, I quickly stopped in the restroom, and I noticed (to my horror) that I literally had bags under my eyes—not just dark circles, but BAGS. THAT is how tired I am, yet it is 11:45 p.m. and I'm still up writing this blog for probably the one or two people that will actually read it. Oh well. I think it's mostly for myself than anything else.

I think I am going to defy space and time and work backwards chronologically today because I think that makes the most sense. See, the reason I'm up very late with the enormous bags under my eyes and didn't go to bed super early (last night I had the glorious opportunity of going to bed at 9p.m. *miracle*) is because tonight I drove to Virginia. For anyone who has not been to the East coast, this might seem mind blowing, but in this area it is very quick and easy to get from one state to another. Just to get to Gaithersburg where I work is about a 3 1/2 hour drive and I go through 3 states. So Virginia is only about 20 minutes from here, and I have a friend who lives about 40 minutes away that I decided to go visit because I haven't seen him in about 3 years. And by 40 minutes, I mean 40 minutes in a perfect world. And a perfect world would have two things: 1) no traffic, and 2) no GPSs. The traffic around here is a NIGHTMARE. Literally. I'm starting to develop a phobia about it. I'm sure I'm going to start having like Vietnam-flashbacks about it. Today, it took me almost 20 minutes to get from the office to Panera, which is .9 miles away. Not 9 miles, but 0.9 miles. Ridiculous. I left Gaithersburg at 7 p.m. thinking that traffic should not be a big issue, but turns out I was wrong. It's bad at any hour, which leads me to my next problem: the GPS. Yesterday, I warned you never to trust that voice, no matter how friendly. But today I got sucked back into its magical powers and I let it temp me into choosing an alternate route to avoid traffic on my way to Virginia. It just made the option look so tempting, and I was so vulnerable because I was sick of traffic and anxious to get to VA. But I'm determined not to let it tempt me AGAIN. It took me through all of these bizarre back roads that it got me turned around twice, and two other times it told me to turn where there was no road, and once it straight up didn't tell me which road to take when I was presented with two options and then proceeded to yell at me when I made the wrong choice. I wanted to punch it in the face, if it had one. So it took me 25 minutes longer to get to where I was going than it should have. I did not fall for it's tricks on the way home. I stuck it out, patiently, through the traffic (yes, even at 11 p.m. there is traffic—thank you construction), and I came to the realization of why it must be making up streets and bizarre directions. There is a lot of construction going on on some of the highways I took to get to VA and back, and the GPS itself was confused by the traffic patterns. At one point on my way home I had to openly defy the GPS in favor of my own sense of direction because the traffic patterns had been greatly altered due to construction, and I was triumphant. I've decided to grow a backbone and not use the GPS as a crutch anymore—I have a good internal sense of direction and I'm going to trust that from now on, and Magellan will just have to deal with it.

At my internship today, I finished my first article! Well, the first draft anyway (which is punny, because the article is about a draft horse... some nerdy horse humor for you). I gave it to the managing editor to look over and edit. I'm excited! I think the article came out really well, I just hope my editor likes it. I also finished cataloguing all the back issues, so today I actually had to ask for my work to do.... Turns out I got something really fun! Hilary, the senior editor, told me I could help pick out the cover for the August issue! So I spent about an hour going through about a hundred photos and picking ones that would maybe make a good cover shot and ones that would be good for inside the magazine in the article that went with it. This task is actually WAY harder than it sounds. You would think that with a hundred photos, one would have to work. But there are a lot of things to consider, both artistic and technical. You have to find something that is beautiful and artistic, but it also has to have space for the title and the cover lines, the background needs to be subdued so the cover lines pop out, they have to their top hats on their head or helmets on their head, the horse needs to be in a technically correct position yet not look to "circus-y" so that our readers feel like they can relate and that they can make their horses do that too (even though they really probably can't), the tail can't be too high, the horse's head can't be at all behind the vertical, the list goes on and on. This is a very hard task. We found a few that we liked. And then inside shots were almost equally hard. It's all about balance. And these photos have to go through a technical review after we pick them, where someone who knows a TON about the sport (and the senior editor knows A LOT and she isn't even the final word) looks at them to make sure we are promoting correct images/technique. Basically, we have to find a safe photo for a broad range of audience, some more casual and some very picky, and ALL of them are very opinionated. So this can be a painstaking process if you don't want hundreds of letters to the editor each month with some small complain about a horse's ears being too far back or something.

I also had more fun with the Rolodex today. I was put in charge of sending out Complementary issues of the magazine to people who either wrote an article, had a photo included, etc. So I went Rolodex crazy and found out where some more famous riders live. Exciting. And I went through the drafts and final copies for our June issue, so I actually saw the entire magazine already and I know what's going to be in it. Its pretty freaking cool. It's going to be a good one :) I just feel so powerful.

Well all of this power and arguing with technology has made me very tired, and now I must sleep. Thanks for reading and please post lots of comments! They make me happy and let me know people are reading. And please follow the blog! You guys are great, thanks for making my life legit.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Day 4: Argument with alarm system = policeman at dinner. And the struggles with food continue.

Let's recap. I think it's safe to conclude from my last few blog posts that Week 1 was a week of successes: new internship, nice staff, writing magazine articles, successfully navigated to and from DC, and made it a whole week pretending to be an adult and proving to the world that I know what the heck I'm doing.

I think Week 2 is going to be a little different. If the rest of the week is anything like today, I think we will be able to safely label Week 2 a week of struggles.

For symmetry's sake, I think I will invoke the usage of the timeline like I did last Wednesday. It was most effective and I think will paint a nice picture of my struggles today.

Starting with late Tuesday night:
7:15 p.m. Released from "mom" duty after my mom returns from work.
7:45–8:10 Finish last of my work for Caselle for the day
8:30 Watch some of the Phillies game and forget all impending responsibilities
9:00 Realize that it's already super late and I've not started packing for my internship tomorrow. Clean clothes? Probably not...
9:15 Start Packing
9:45 Packing/room cleaning
10:00 Realize that I also need to pack food for trip. Beginnings of the weekly struggle with food. Make egg salad and pack cooler.
10:45 Phone call with long lost friend. Eyelids start protesting about still having to remain open.
11:25 Brush teeth and hop in bed.
11:45 Still can't fall asleep

Wednesday
12:00a.m. (or somewhere around there) Blessed sleep
5:00 a.m. Alarm. Hit snooze button for first time.
5:05 Snooze button second time
5:10 Snooze button third time.
5:15 Rise. No Shine.
6:45 Finally ready to leave house
7:00 Stop for gas
7:00–9:30 Rain, traffic, and several arguments with the GPS. No matter how friendly that voice sounds, NEVER trust it.
9:30 Brief panic attack. Remember that I was supposed to conduct a phone interview for a story at 9:30. Fail. What was I thinking for scheduling a call that early on a Wednesday?
9:30–11:00 More rain, traffic, and struggles with the GPS.
11:00 Arrive at the office. Hair is standing up a bit.
11:05 Frantically send apology email to interviewee and reschedule for later in the day.
11:08 Realize that the publisher and owner of the company are at the next table over having their annual meeting with Practical Horseman. The remain there, disrupting my quiet and my privacy, for the rest of the day.
12:30 p.m. SEO training. Remembering something about not being able to teach old dogs new tricks. That definitely applies to technology and "seasoned" (you know what I mean) editors.
1:00 Hunger strikes in my stomach. Struggles with food continue as all the people in the meeting next to me decide to take a lunch break at the exact same time and they open up their nice Panera-catered lunch. I sneakily pull out my sad-looking peanut butter and jelly sandwich and eat it at my computer, hoping no one will notice.
3:28 Relocate to Jen's desk for my phone interview so I don't interrupt the meeting going on near my own desk.
3:30 Try to call interviewee from Jen's work phone. Fail. Can't figure out how to dial an outside call.
3:33 Abandon my efforts to use work phone and just use my cell.
4:00 Finish writing article. Sleepiness creeps up on me.
5:50 Leave office.
6:05 Arrive at the house I'm staying at. No car in the driveway.
6:06 Use key and open door. The alarm for the security system goes off.
6:07 Panic sets in. Cannot remember the alarm code. The alarm gets louder.
6:08 Realization that I don't have the family's cell number.
6:09 Stand outside and wait for police to arrive because I have no idea how to make the alarm sound stop.
6:15 Alarm finally stops going off. I go inside the house.
6:20 Try to go back outside to get my bag out of the trunk and the alarm gets mad at me again when I open the door. Finally remember alarm code, hit a few other buttons, and the alarm ceases to be angry at me.
6:25 Policeman shows up at the house. Finally. If I really were a robber, I could have successfully stolen everything in the house by now. I go outside and tell him what happened. I think he figures that if I were a robber, I probably wouldn't come outside and greet him, so he is friendly, accepts my story, and then leaves.
6:26 Struggles with food continue. Attempt to microwave a frozen dinner that I brought all the way from PA, and of course it says it needs to be cooked at 50% power.
6:27 Attempt to change power level on microwave.
6:35 Still no luck. Decide to microwave at full power for half the time. Mathematically, this should be a sound principle, but the food starts making popping sounds in the microwave. however, the method is somewhat effective.
6:40 Eat microwave dinner and breathe a little.
6:50 Retire to bedroom and play Angry Birds.
7:30 Decide to write blog

So that's pretty much my day. It wouldn't be a good day if the police didn't show up at dinner time for me breaking and entering. I think it's an early bedtime for me and my poor nerves tonight.