And making some mean lemonade
My name is Jacky. Miami, FL native, now working in NYC and living in NJ with my beau. I use my tumblr to capture moments that I can revisit.
And making some mean lemonade
Came in with my power blazer and heels, ready to do some damage (in a good way) at the office, only to find out the internet is down. Now dealing with a jerk tech guy who’s giving me grief for wanting to talk to sup. Not the plan I had envisioned for today. Hope it gets better.
Dear Universe,
I really need any hit to happen, just something, please. I don’t mean to beg but for my sanity, I’d really appreciate if something came through.
No matter what, I still think you’re the shit.
-Me
The Big Picture: Disaster unfolds slowly in the Gulf of Mexico
(via marco)
this photo makes me so sad
You’ll discover soon enough that with a couple really great pairs of sandals, you don’t need any other footwear for summer. A black pair, a brown pair, maybe a fun colored pair and some wedges for fancier affairs, and you’re set. Unlike winter in which you need a pair of boots to go with everything (is it snowing? raining? icy?), the hardest decision you’ll make during the summer is what color to paint your toenails. (I recommend coral or lavender.)
Here are two pairs of adorable sandals for $50 total that will get you through the next few months:
goodness do I love Target
Now I can post via blackberry. Technology rock!
I’ve read a few amazing books in the past week and a couple that were okay, but didn’t knock my socks off.
Here’s the rundown:
- The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson - I’m making my way through this series and this book was far better than the first. These books are flat-out fantastic and there’s not much else I can add except that Larsson’s writing style is wonderful to read (even translated from Swedish) and makes the great story that much better.
- Rise and Shine by Anna Quindlen - This is the first book I’ve read by Quindlen and I enjoyed it. It struck me as kind of a smart girl’s attempt at chick lit and that bothered me at first (if you’re going to write a chick lit book, just write it), but the story was engaging. My one major fault: the teenager in the story, a 19-year-old boy, talks nothing like a 19-year-old—let alone a male 19-year-old. It frustrated me the whole way through.
- French Women Don’t Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano - Sound advice, but a little off-putting. It would be easy to take this book and go too far with it, and let’s face it: French women may have time to cook three-hour long meals and have access to fresh food markets, but it’s a little harder here. Her insistence that her recipes are no more expensive is crap. I’m completely on board with eating local and choosing fresh vegetables and cooking healthfully, but don’t kid yourself in thinking that this is in any way cheaper than buying frozen foods. But, in the end, her advice about portion size and balance was useful, but nothing I haven’t heard before. Maybe this book was an eye-opener when it was published several years ago, but you can get this same advice in any magazine or blog today.
- Apartment Therapy: The Eight-Step Home Cure by Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan - I loved this book. Instead of offering a whole list of trite design tidbits (“use warm colors in your living room!”), it instead tries to change the way you think about the word home. From reducing clutter, to creating calm spaces to eating and cooking at home with your family, this is more of a lifestyle book than a design one. (Not that there aren’t sound design portions in it.) It gave me some great organizational ideas and further cemented my belief that cooking and eating at home (without the TV on!) is one of the best things for relaxing at the end of a long day.
- Towelhead by Alicia Erian - My only preview to this book was an NPR interview I heard with the filmmaker, author and the actress who played the main character (Jasira) in the movie adaptation of this book last year. I still haven’t seen the film (although I want to now). This book was uncomfortable to read. I was cringing—on the outside—during some parts. On the other hand, it’s so well-written and so heart-breaking. I found myself initially resenting the main character a bit, but growing to be on her side. It’s hard to decide who are the “bad guys” and “good guys” in this book. The parts with Jasira’s boyfriend, for some reason, were the hardest parts of the book for me to get through. If you’ve read it, I’d like to know your reaction too.
Have you read any of these? What did you think?
(via jessicachu)
I really need to update more.
sometimes I feel like he really is oblivious to my feelings, which is annoying as I always consider his.
rant, rant, rant.
time for chipotle!
sprint still hasn’t called for their 11am call with me and should’ve known better that they prob won’t. puffy eyes for the past few days. im not one to beat myself up over material things, except when they are given to me from 2 hard working people that dont deserve my irresponsibility. cant seem to shake these blues.
lost my phone (not even 4 days old), living on 6 bucks for 2 weeks, extremly disappointed with life at the moment…
Im 22 years old today. Im in miami , seeing my friends, my family. I feel like its been a long time since ive been here. A part of me feels like theirs some people that will always be in my life, and another part of me is scared that if I take a leap and go on the infinite search for I dont even know what, ill maybe loose them. Im terrible with keeping in touch and it hurts to see when things have moved on or rather things have happened without me, but its nice to know that with some people its possible to grow in the same direction(together) even if we are in separate places. I didnt have anything planned for my birthday, even if i did just end up in a warehouse party, sweating, drinking a 40 of miller highlife, and ending up under an overpass, im glad i got to spend time with all my friends, people ill always care about and who will always have a place in my life no matter where it takes me. and to my friends i didnt get to spend it with, they were definately in my thoughts.
note to self/birthday resolution:
Try and be better with keeping in touchits so easy to close myself off and make myself feel so alone, when im really not, I cant do that anymore.
Happy Birthday…I miss you
(via crack-n-berries)