Warm toes

By , February 20, 2016 7:00 am

I had to throw out my beloved leopard slippers, because they got too dirty and gross (okay, and schmelly). Sadness.

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Wait. I say beloved, yet, I actually found these under our bed when we moved out of our townhome in the beginning of December. So they are only recently beloved.

But I used the hell out of them for two months at the rental house, then the first two weeks at the new house (aww, it’s been two weeks!). And now, I can’t imagine being slipper-less! And especially goofy slipper-less.

Luckily, I found a perfect (but not purrfect, ha ha) replacement! And for only $5! If they would have had more in my size, I would have stocked up!

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Now, I just have to stay out of the garage and other… less clean rooms with them, so they don’t get trashed like the other ones did.

(Ha, but it was totally my feet schmelling them up, too.)


In other news, I can’t believe I am actually looking forward to (attempting to) meet the neighbors today. At our townhome, we avoided our neighbors as much as possible. It’s such a nice change to feel so different! I hope they like pumpkin muffins!

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Our neighbor to the west called me yesterday to tell me she put her guest passes to the local HUGE gym in our name to try it out. How nice is that?

Shoulder runner

By , February 19, 2016 4:13 am

Well, this will take some time to figure out/get used to.

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Country road running. Lots of it on shoulders.

When you leave suburbia, you leave the suburbia running safety net – aka, sidewalks (and streets with low speed limits!). Ha.

We basically live in the country now. We’re really close to the head of a local 31 mile trail but I can’t quite run on that until the snow clears (the shaded parts of the trail are sheets of ice). The closest neighborhoods are miles away (yay!). So that means I am running on the shoulders of the road. Roads with HIGH speed limits.

Which cancels out running in lots of conditions. Dark? Bad idea. Heavy rain or snow? Bad idea. Rush hour? Also a bad idea. You get the… idea.

I knew this is how it would be. And I’ve already started to learn which roads are safer (read: less trafficked) than others. And it’s FUN to find new routes and run in new places!

But it’s so different than what I am used to.

And that’s good. Change. Is. Good.

Another change? We’re so close to Wisconsin! I can leave my house and run to the state line in 1.5 miles! My tracking sheet is going to start getting really complicated as runs go from Illinois to Wisconsin and back!


Our neighbors to the west stopped by yesterday (and brought a huge Kringle for us!) and gave me LOTS of tips on where to cycle/run around the new house. They’re cyclists and workout enthusiasts, which is awesome! And they know everyone on the street and gave us a lot of history. Talking with them really made me look forward to knocking on people’s doors and saying hello this weekend!

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Random Thoughts Thursday 87

By , February 18, 2016 7:23 am
  • We’ve arrived to the part of winter where I see it’s going to be 20°F and think “Oh, it’s gonna be warm today!” Ha! We have an actual warm spell coming Friday, accompanied by 30 mph winds with 60 mph gusts. Okay, then. I hope that isn’t a sign of how our spring will be – you all know I get a little stabby with the high winds.
  • I spoke too soon on Monday when I mentioned we hadn’t seen Denali in awhile – he/she came around that morning. I realized Denali was visiting when I saw legs from the basement window. Creepy! Ha! Then Denali and Data had words and I heard Data make some noises I’d NEVER heard from him before. Eek.

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I feel bad for Denali. I wish his/her owner would give him some love.

  • Would you live in a house without a bathtub? Our new house is 1.5 baths, and there’s no bathtub! Only a shower! I LOVE taking baths, so we worked it in to the FHA 203k work to renovate the first floor bathroom to be a full bath. And we just ordered a deep soaker bathtub for it. SO. EXCITED!!!!!
  • Now I know why I have a hard time remembering English words from time to time (pdf here) – it’s because my brain knows too many Spanish ones! There ya go! It’s not cause I’m crazy. Nope, nope, nope. Ha, seriously though, xaarlin shared this article and it makes so much sense to me – when you know (or are learning) two languages, your brain has to make a choice each time about which language to use, and sometimes it messes up and you can’t remember a word you know and used all your life, even if you are speaking in your native tongue. But it’s actually a good exercise for your brain to choose between the two languages! I forget words all the time, so let’s say it’s this, okay? (I know it totally isn’t.)
  • I had mentioned I was hoping I’d still be able to see the sunrise and sunset from our new home, and I can! And it’s just a short run to get more of the vista. Now I just need to work on my timing!

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Link to Random Thoughts Thursday 86

House Project: Coat Closet

By , February 17, 2016 5:40 am

Alternatively titled “Why We Purposefully Want a Smaller Coat Closet.” This is part of the FHA 203k work

There’s a lot of goofy things going on at our house* – things that obviously aren’t “make or break” since we bought the place, but things we will be fixing now and over the years.

And one of those things is (was, really!) the coat closet.

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Foyer, before

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Us trying to use the coat closet as is – ha ha, my dad moved all the coat hooks from the left side to the right side when he visited (so coats didn’t hang over the shoes) then that wall was demolished five days later. I told him all his hard work was for NOTHING! Ha.

We have a double door entry to our house, with a sidelight on each side. And for whatever reason, the coat closet was encompassing one of the sidelights on the inside. So we had this HUGE coat closet, but it was odd that you could only see one sidelight in the foyer, and that from the outside, you could see in to the coat closet via that window. It made my inner architect crazy.

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The window inside the closet

So we had the contractor push the wall back behind the sidelight, to reclaim it for the foyer.

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Already looks better!

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Sloppy in progress photo, but you can see the extra light in the foyer

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Moving this wall has presented a few issues, of course:

  • The closet can’t be the typical 2′ depth, because of the location of the window trim from the back (garage) wall (which is already furred out, unfortunately). It’s a couple of inches short, so our coats won’t have as much space as a normal closet, but they’ll fit.
  • The previous owners didn’t leave any extra floor tiles in the house (we did find some pretty mosaic tiles though), so we had to try to match the demolished floor. And they put the floor at an angle, so we need a bunch of tiles. We couldn’t match the color exactly, but matched the pattern. We don’t want to redo the whole floor because that would require us to figure out the entire feel we want the house to have over time, and we are SO not there yet. I plan to use a rug to break up the difference in color. Ha. Now you all know my little secret.

But! We think it looks much better this way!

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We’ll pick out a new closet door handle, and get to the tile in early March when it comes in.

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Much more open!

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*We’d love to have a history of the house and all the additions/work on it!

What’s in a name?

By , February 16, 2016 6:23 am

A few years ago, I was getting an EKG and chatted with the nurse doing it about where she lives. Zion, she told me.

“Oh, Zion! I don’t know much about that town!”

“IT’S ZY-IN, NOT ZY-ON!!!”

Geesh. I didn’t get to ask her much about Zion, since I effed up the pronunciation so much! I’d only ever heard that name in The Matrix before, and that was the way they pronounced it in the movie. I’ve never mistakenly said ZY-ON again. ZY-IN, ZY-IN, ZY-IN. Got it.

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Not our water tower – we’re on a well!

I really DIDN’T know much about Zion at the time – just where it was located (near the lake, and far away from our townhouse). I hadn’t heard about the Zee Bee Run 5K Run Series yet. I didn’t have a reason to go over there.

But now… you guessed it. Now we live in Zion.

Unincorporated Zion, actually. We’re so far away from the town of Zion, it’s kind of silly we’re even considered unincorporated.

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Zion doesn’t have a fantastic reputation. I became more aware of this as we told local people we were trying to buy a house there. Almost every person responded with a bewildered look and asked “Are you sure?” Followed by “The school district is HORRIBLE!” Then whatever random story about Zion’s reputation they could remember. Even our townhouse neighbor who moved in from a rough part of Chicago thought we were loco. Ha – my mom witnessed our movers do it to us (and was surprised by it) – when they were at the rental house, they straight up asked “Why are you moving to Zion?!” I told them they’d see when they got to the house. (A few people did have nice things to say – but the overwhelming response was “WTF are you thinking?!”)

I appreciated that people were concerned for our well-being. Heck, I just did that to a friend when they moved – “make sure you’re on the south side of the train tracks!” But here’s the thing (which I always explained) – we’re over six miles from downtown Zion. We’re a mile and a half from the city limits. And we basically live in horse country – most of our neighbors have property with horses and sometimes other wildlife (yesterday I saw a horse playing with a donkey during my run, and during my first run from the new house, I saw horses, donkeys, and bison!). We’re not so much concerned about city crime – not to say we’re oblivious – it’s just that there are other things to think about for security, where we live. And the school district thing isn’t an issue, since we aren’t having kids.

I’m not sure what’ll happen if you say Zion wrong around here though. So I’m definitely being cautious about that. Ha!

More visitors

By , February 15, 2016 8:31 am

At the same time I telling you guys about Denali being in our yard (who, by the way, we haven’t seen in a week) I was saying to Steven “I wonder when the deer are going to come visit!”* We live extremely close to two forest preserves, and I saw a large pack of deer in an open area of one preserve a few times and wondered if they’d come by…

… and some did, this morning!

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At first, Data and I just saw one.

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Data growled when he saw the first one in the yard. Oh, Data.

Then we followed him and realized he was with five others!

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You can totally see them, right?! Ha.

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I know – seeing deer in your yard isn’t that novel for the northern Chicago suburbs. And six isn’t that many. But I had been hoping they’d come by since we moved in, so it was exciting for me!

Next up – actually meeting the human neighbors, ha! Steven talked to a few of them before we moved in, and they seem really nice. We live on a dead-end street with only a few houses, so it would seem odd not to stop by and introduce ourselves. Hopefully we can this weekend!

*I do want the woodland creatures to visit – just not dogs without accompanying humans.

Training Week 330

By , February 14, 2016 5:51 pm

Highlight of the Week: The sleep I got instead of running / cycling in our new basement / teaching Valentine’s Day Fitness Boxing!

Week330

Monday | February 8, 2016: teaching strength class
Strength: two dumbbell and core with cardio, Difficulty: easy, Felt: decent

Tuesday | February 9, 2016: rest
Wednesday | February 10, 2016: 7 m run + 10 m ride + 10 mins strength
Loc: Lindenhurst Park District, Time: 58:55, Pace: 8:25 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good – needed to run
Indoor Ride Time: 35:19, Pace: 17.0 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good

Thursday | February 11, 2016: 3 m run
Loc: new hood, Temp: 19°/18°, Time: 23:21, Pace: 7:47 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: surprisingly good
Friday | February 12, 2016: teaching strength class + 8 m ride + 6 m run (incl. 5×800)
Strength: body bars and bands mixed mode, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Indoor Ride Time: 27:04, Pace: 17.7 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Lindenhurst Park District, Time: 49:17, Pace: 8:13, Difficulty: medium/hard, Felt: okay, but too tight on the track

Saturday | February 13, 2016: 14.5 m run
Loc: Rec Plex, Time: 2:09:16, Pace: 8:55 avg, Difficulty: physically easy/mentally tough, Felt: decent, sore from too much indoor running
Sunday | February 14, 2016: teaching fitness boxing
Strength: boxing and body weight movements, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great

Notes:

  • I started my week off EXHAUSTED from moving and unpacking Saturday-Monday! I skipped my Monday afternoon run in favor of a nap and think I could have slept until Tuesday morning. Ha! I took Tuesday off from running, too. Then my mood was HELLA off from not running for two days. Blah.
  • Bobbi and I rode to the indoor track together on Wednesday (but didn’t run together). The track is elevated over the open gym, and there was a Jazzzercize class with great tunes going on for our entire run, so I didn’t have to wear my headphones! The class looked SO fun – I want to try it out! Running so many laps in one direction bugged my outer knee a bit when I stopped running (to get a drink or go to the bathroom) but it was fine after the run.
  • I wonder if I’ve had my bike trainer resistance too high for some time – when I set it back up at the new house I had it looser and I felt like I was flying, and could hit a high cadence in a middle gear (which is how it should be).
  • This was just NOT my week. I got a massive headache on Thursday and had to take the afternoon off. I felt better when I got up and went for a short run, but it was not the mileage I wanted to get in. Friday and Saturday were really cold, so I took my run indoors. I thought I was cheating doing my repeats indoors on Friday and not in the wind like last week but I think I’d take the wind over those tight corners! 7 laps to the half mile! I only did 5×800 (and skipped my 8×1:00). Honestly, 800s on that short of a track did NOT feel safe.
  • On Saturday I went to a bigger track for my long run – 6 laps to the mile. We all know how that went. Ha. My body is not a huge fan of running in the same direction over and over – it makes my feet and lower legs sore. And the track got a bit crowded, later in the day. Let’s hope I don’t have to do that again – too many runs indoors this week!
  • At least my week ended with something awesome – fitness boxing! I encouraged the class to wear red, pink or black and brought in cookies from Maria’s Oven for everyone! Hopefully next week will be less nutso…

Link to Training Week 329

This is why I shouldn’t run indoors

By , February 13, 2016 10:33 pm

Because I have no proprioception, and then this happens, from banging my elbow in to the track* rail over and over:

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My only hope is that I’ll still be able to do plank-ups in my fitness boxing class tomorrow! I know my class would hate it if I took those out because I couldn’t do them with them, ha!

Who else got a bit emotional watching the Olympic Marathon Trials today?! Gawd, it was so hard to see the fourth place finishers – my heart broke for them! My predictions for the women were right, but in the wrong finishing order! For men, I had no idea, other than rooting for Meb and a few who didn’t make the team. I hope Rio isn’t as hot as LA was today…

*I was on an indoor track where the inside lane was for running, and overlooked an open gym – hence the rail I bumped in to a zillion times.

House Project: The FHA 203k Streamlined Work!

By , February 13, 2016 5:32 am

As I mentioned, we got a special home improvement loan when we bought the house – an FHA 203(k) streamlined loan. This type of loan allows the homeowner to finance up to $35,000 in repairs/improvements/upgrades as part of their mortgage. Schweet, right? Our house has some critical items that need to be fixed (see list below) and this was the best way for us to be able to afford to do it, as soon as possible.

An FHA 203(k) streamlined loan requires quite a bit of work on the homeowner’s side. It’s the homeowner’s responsibility to find the 203(k) approved contractor, and to develop the scope of work with them. The homeowner has to get a construction estimate and a bunch of FHA 203(k) paperwork from the contractor before the mortgage process can begin (then sometimes, throughout the mortgage process, your close date is delayed by a week because the lender decided that fixing a low pressure faucet needs to be added to the FHA paperwork and then it takes that long to review it again… sometimes that happens). After close, it’s the homeowner’s responsibility to pay the contractor (via checks from the bank) and to oversee the construction, and make sure it’s done in the right amount of time.

Steven and I are really comfortable with overseeing construction – it’s basically what I do for work (well, used to… when I was more involved with that stage). And how exciting that we get to watch our house be transformed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! <— yes, I really mean all those exclamation marks.

So here’s what our general contractor will be working on:

  • Soffit and fascia repair
  • Installing new gutters
  • Installing gutter apron flashing
  • Attic cleaning and new insulation
  • Removing and replacing patio doors
  • Remodeling first floor bathroom
  • Remodeling coat closet
  • Fixing low water pressure on second floor bathroom sink

This list is WAY different than what we thought it would be. Remember I mentioned us almost not buying the house since we can’t get cable internet (we need fast internet since we both work from home)? We were considering installing a tower on our property to get internet. We had a wireless site survey done, and the guy flew a drone and told us we’d need to build a 90′ tower to clear our trees… then we found out the next day* that the county only allows 65′ towers. Crap. Steven and I came to the conclusion we’d use a wireless hotspot, and were excited to have $15,000 back in the budget for other projects (remodeling both bathrooms!!!). Ha, not so fast! The next day*, during the roof inspection, we figured out why there were so many animal droppings in our attic – there are actually openings in the attic, to the outside. Uh, that’s not good. So guess how much it will cost to fix our clay tile roof – that $15,000 we thought we had back. Ha! (Our roof is really neat, but it’s a specialty roof and expensive to work on.)

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But! The great thing about all of this is that we mentioned to our general contractor how we can’t build an internet tower, and he got us in touch with a buddy who sells T-Mobile wireless to businesses that work out of the home. We talked to his buddy and got an AMAZING deal on our wireless – 300GB a month PLUS binge on for Netflix/etc for a steal (we got it for the same price we were looking at for 30GB a month!)! All Steven had to do was plug the antenna in on Saturday and the internet was ready to go and works great. YAY for something being so easy!!!

It was too cold to begin the roof repair work this week, so the crew came over and started demolishing the coat closet yesterday.

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I’ll explain what’s going on with that when it’s finished!

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Data’s spot of choice during the early am wall demolition (he slept on the bench during afternoon demo, ha ha).

There’s lots of stories about each repair item, and I will share those as we go!

*This was the craziest week ever. Black Friday was the previous week (11/27) and Steven was SO busy with work – going in the warehouse EVERY day (because there were so many sales, yay!). Steven was at the new house on 11/30 for an inspection and for the wireless site survey (ha, and I had to go there that night because he accidentally locked his keys in the car). I had to go downtown for work 12/1 and 12/2. We met with a potential contractor at the house on 12/3 (and Steven again on 12/5 in the morning). Steven went to the roof inspection on 12/4. And… we moved in to our rental that Saturday, the 5th. We didn’t get much packing done during the week! All this made me feel much more confident about move #2, since our week was less hectic, going in to it!

House Project: Garbage Disposal

By , February 12, 2016 4:01 am

Our first completed house project! Yay!

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Our home was move in ready, but we have a HUGE list of improvements we look forward to making (and then there’s another list of stuff our contractor will be doing!). The first thing Steven tackled and completed this week was installing a garbage disposal. We had one at our townhome and didn’t realize how much we used it until our rental house didn’t have one and it that made me loco (seriously – I got so sick of picking bits of food out of the sink to throw away).

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Under the kitchen sink – before

The garbage disposal at the new house required some special attention because we’re on a septic tank. That’s the little blue box on the front of the unit – every time the disposer is turned on, it injects microorganisms in to the disposer to break down the food waste in the septic system. Gotta keep the new septic tank healthy!

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Under the kitchen sink – after

Steven said it wasn’t too bad to install – he rerouted a few pipes and put in an outlet. And it only required ONE trip to Menards! Maybe everything will go this smoothly?! Ha!

And! We got to use it last night when we made dinner. Yay, home cooked food!!!!!!!!!!!

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And sort of related (because it’s also in the kitchen) – we have more space in our kitchen/dining area, so Steven was able to bring home his espresso cart from the Fake Meats warehouse (he used it there, before)!

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And bonus – we can put ALL the coffee things on/in it, which frees up counter space. Schweet! Eventually, I’d like to get a buffet for the wall next to the cart, to store serving platters and alcohol-y things in, but that’s a way down the road.

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