Sunday, May 27, 2012

Pietro Dressing

WE HAVE A SECRET DRESSING WE USE IN MY HOME. It's called Pietro. Have you heard of it?


There are different versions of it, Ginger or Ume (plum). But we're so crazy about the sesame miso, we haven't been willing to live without it long enough to try a different flavor. We love...no...let's be hones...we're addicted to the Pietro's Sesame & Miso Dressing.

The brightness of vinegar sweetened with miso and balanced by sesame oil. Mmmmm!

It's more than a dressing. You can put it on anything:  plain rice, veggies, mayo, salads, sandwiches, meats (cooked and as a marinade), chicken, fish, tofu. I swear, we've put it on just about everything, except dessert!

You can find it at many grocery stores, usually in the international aisle.

May yumminess surround you,


Catherine

Monday, May 30, 2011

A&W in Modesto

I was in Modesto the other day visiting a friend.

Who knew it was such a quaint town...at least sections of it.

We lunched at the A&W near downtown.

The girl rollerskated to our car...propping the food tray on our car window!


Just like the old days...uh, you remember the old days...where girls wore pony tails and guys slicked back their hair?

We slurped down frosted mugs of root beer floats...ice cream dripping down the sides...crunchy fries...and a cheese burger too big for me to finish.

Aw! The good life.



If you're ever near Modesto, stop by A&W for a bite to eat and drive through some of the little neighborhoods. There are some beautiful old houses reminiscent of Willow Glen selling for around $125,000.

A bargain in many ways.

May good memories surround you,


Cathy

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Getting Organized in the Google Era—How to Stay Efficient, Productive (and Sane) in an Information-Saturated World (Book)

Some say we are moving into the Human Age. A time where it matters less if countries and companies can access capital and more if they can attract and retain the talent they need to win.

And as for us, the talent, to be competitive in an ever-changing world, we need to commit to lifelong learning.

I know, I know. You thought you were done with school a long time ago. But have you noticed how fast things change these days? How many new tools there are to choose from? How often your apps and programs get upgraded? 

Well, it’s kind of like that. We need to get upgraded from time to time, too. And no one can do that for us, except ourselves.  

That's why I love Getting Organized in the Google Era—How to Stay Efficient, Productive (and Sane) in an Information-Saturated World by Douglas Merrill. It’s full of tips and techniques on how to improve my work life and my home life. Written with irreverent humor, it was an easy way for me to upgrade me.

Merrill gives a fresh view of how to stay organized in a world exploding in information. Although he often suggests online tools, he’s no technophile and sometimes recommends a paper-based tool over a technology-based one.  You’ll learn new ways to manage your email, calendar, to do lists and so much more. As a dyslexic with a PhD in Cognitive Science (how people learn and solve problems), Merrill has been using and fine tuning organizational techniques for years.

I love his conversational style, personal stories and 21 Principles of Organization:  Organize your life to minimize brain strain, get stuff out of your head as quickly as possible, multitasking can actually make you less efficient, etc.

He ends his book with Stuff We Love. A list of tools and apps he loves, likes and dislikes. Oh, sure, there are things you’ve heard of like Gmail (uh, he puts Outlook under “dislike”), but what about Adium for Mac (see Pidgin.im for Windows PCs) so you can access multiple instant messaging services in one place? Ever hear of Phonevite where you can send one voicemail to multiple people (maybe family and friends waiting for good news or even bad)?

There are lots of things I still want to try and here are three I’m using right now:

--  The tilde symbol (~) immediately before a word I’m searching so that Google will look for Web pages containing the word and others like it. For example, if I search for “paris hotels” ~affordable, Google looks for paris hotels affordable, cheap, budget.

--  Fewer folders for my Outlook email and using my search function instead.


--  RememberTheMilk.com, a free online tool to mange my To Do lists.

If you’d like a fun read that improves your home life and your work life, get this book and use it. 

May efficiency surround you, 


Catherine

Sunday, April 10, 2011

My Latest Obsession: Garr Reynolds

SPIRIT.  Abraham calendar quote (please buy your own copy at Abraham-Hicks.com > Store > Calendars > Planning Calendar/Workbook):  "It is important to understand that you do not have to physically get invovled in order to allow the pure positive Energy that streams into this time and place. Every time you are silently appreciating, every time you are letting something in your physical realm be the object of attention and at the same time you are vibrationally connected to your Source of Energy--you are adding upliftment to this time and place. Every time!"  -- Abraham

What are you giving your attention to? Is that uplifting you and others?

WORK.  I've been doing a lot of research on the internet...looking for new ideas and ways to do things differently at my new job.

Oooooo! I found Garr Reynolds and I'm obsessed.

He's all about simple, powerful images with strong emotional ties on business presentations because he's fighting:



I've ordered every one of his books and am flinging open my front door every hour or so to see if my box(OK...OK...I admit...boxes) of books from Amazon have arrived yet.

Visit his blog at PresentationZen.com.

I CAN'T WAIT TO TRY THIS AT WORK! ! !

How about you? What do you plan to differently at work this week, hmm?

May newness surround you,


Catherine

Saturday, April 2, 2011

I'm Alive

YES, I AM ALIVE AND WELL.

Sorry. Didn't mean to scare you. I really am alive...and well...and happy.

It's just that I've been so busy. My new boss wanted my ideas on how to improve a PowerPoint presentation.

So I do what I usually do, which is lots of research. I've been Googling on the computer for hours at home...2-3 hours after work and 8-12 hours on the weekends. I get sucked in and have to pull myself away. But I'm having fun and it's so interesting.

Presented my ideas to my manager yesterday; 6 pages of typed comments & a draft re-do of the presentation. She said it was more than what she expected. That's what I want to hear!

Now I'm off researching something else.

I get up at 6:00 AM > meditate for 15 minutes > get cleaned up and dressed > drive to work > work > off after 5:00 PM > home after 6:00 PM > visit with the fam and eat din din > jump on the computer for a 2-3 hours > fall into bed.

I miss my old work friends, my blog and the Cheetos Bill used to bring me so I wouldn't steal his at lunch.

And I know I'll settle into my new job, get to know people and will build new friendships over time.

ABRAHAM-HICKS DAILY QUOTE (see Abraham-Hicks.com > subscribe to daily quotes).  "Make a decision and then make the decision right. Line up your Energy with it. In most cases it doesn't really matter what you decide. Just decide. There are endless options that would serve you enormously well, and all or any one of them is better than no decision." -- Abraham

"Line up your Energy." That used to confuse me, but now I understand it means thinking about what I want, feeling the end result of joy (or whatever) and doing this a little while until it feels easy and then notice how I feel. When I feel good about the task or thing and I give it a bit of time, inspiring thoughts and ideas and actions float up for me...while I'm driving, resting, napping, being, sitting outside petting Frankie the cat.

And then I take action.

I've been trying to line up my energy more often. It really does make things easier. It's subtle. And so easy for our mind to dismiss how much easier things are, but it really does work.

Try it. Start with something small (so you don't have a lot of judgment or investment in it) and see how it works for you. Practice makes it easier.
BILL AND KIM HAD THIS FLOWER ARRANGEMENT DELIVERED TO MY HOME.



Isn't it the cutest thing? I LOVE IT! ! !

They were trying to cheer me up and cheer me on as I start my new job.

We keep it on the dining room table so everyone can enjoy it each day. I notice it gets moved around a few inches now and then. And I often find the "mouth" sticking straight up. I think Bachan thinks it's some kind of handle.

And to make the flowers more "important" (because they're from Beeru--Bill), Bachan did this:
(sigh)

May sunshine flowers surround you,


Catherine

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Japan Earthquake/Tsunami: Day 15

ISOLATED JAPANESE VILLAGERS SURVIVE.  The tsunami swept away the tiny village of Hadenya, leaving survivors shivering in a hilltop community center.  With bridges, phones, and electricity down, they were stranded and cut off from the outside world for 12 days.

With no time to mourn, they worked together to survive the freezing temperatures and the devastation of their lives. Quickly reorganizing into groups, they chose leaders, assigned tasks, and helped the young and weak. Men scavenged wood and gasoline. Women boiled water and prepared food. Within days, they established a complex community, with a hierarchy and division of labor, where everyone was assigned daily tasks.


"We knew help would come eventually," said Osamu Abe, aged 43, who helped organize the 270 survivors. "Until then, we had to rely on each other to survive."

The tsunami might have swept away their homes, but not their spirit. The Hadenya refugee camp was neat and organized in the Japanese way. Paper listed names and assigned daily tasks, like chopping wood and cooking. Boxes of supplies were stacked in orderly rows along hallway walls. Toilets were immaculate, with cups and soap lined up neatly.

Abe-san naturally assumed authority of the survivors since he was head of the local nature center. The first thing he did after the tsunami was have older school children set up tents in the parking lot because the aftershocks made people afraid to sleep indoors. Later he sent a group down to a marsh to gather water and firewood.

"People need a sense of direction," Abe-san said. "They were stunned from having lost everything."

The next day, groups scoured for wreckage for supplies. A truck washed up on the shore filled with food, which barely kept them fed. 17 year old Shohei Miura found gasoline in smashed cars and beached boats.

The ability of the people of Hadenya to band together to survive is an example of Japan's communal spirit and organizing abilities. It is a story repeated by other groups of survivors in isolated pockets along the ravaged northern coast of Japan, some still waiting for relief.

Gombatte! ! ! (Keep going! Be strong!)

DIN DIN. Craigala (my New York friend) has been staying in the area so I made dinner. I thought he might enjoy a home-cooked meal since he hasn't had one in several months because he's been traveling.

It was a rainy night so I simmered Beef Short Ribs in wine and spooned them over Mushroom Polenta. I served it with Steamed Broccoli topped with a Garlic/Butter Sauce and a side of Grapefruit and Avocado Salad. Craigy likes to end a meal with a bite of sweetness so we indulged in cream-filled eclairs.

He brought an amazing bottle of wine...a 2009 Clos Pepe Estate Pinot Noir. I'm not kidding; I kept licking my lips after each sip. There was absolutely no bite of tannin at all. He got this $60 bottle of wine at a special wine tasting. Oh, that's what an expensive wine tastes like. Hmm...not like the $2.99 bottle I get at TJ's for cooking.

Here's the description, which is much better than anything I could write:  900 cases produced, 14.1% alcohol. Medium strawberry/garnet color. Primary and bright fruit aromas dominate pre-release:  juicy strawberry, cherry and raspberry references make this wine surprisingly open and enticing. There's a bit of spice and earth in both nose and mouth, but the fruit and baby fat are still dominating the flavor profile of this ebullient, young cuvee. Bright and structured in the mouth, but persistently slutty in its infancy, we expect the middle and finish to fill in as the wine settles into its role as a long-term ager. A spectacular, cool vintage very similar to 2007 and 2005, this cool climate gem was a pleasure to grow and make:  no real hardships or challenges in the growing or vinification. Best 2013-2020(?).


ABRAHAM-HICKS CALENDAR QUOTE (see Abraham-Hicks.com > Store > Calendars > Planning Calendar/Workbook).  "JOY ATTRACTS MORE JOY.  You attract by your vibration. Everything in the Universe is experiencing the powerful Law of Attraction...And when you are vibrating in pain, you cannot attract joy. The vibration of pain attracts only pain. The vibration of joy attracts joy, the vibration of illness attracts illness...The Law IS, and the wonderful thing is that once you understand the Law, and you are sensitive enough to feel how you are vibrating, then you have control of your experience."  --  Abraham

I am starting to live the Law of Attraction on purpose. I know this because so many good things are coming to me so easily and effortlessly.

And I am getting better at deliberately creating. I know this because good things are coming to me faster.

I have started my new job and I LOVE IT! ! ! It seems the only thing I did was make one phone call. Everyone else worked hard and called and emailed and met and wrote and somehow all that came together for me in the form of a job offer.

While it's true I did not expend a lot of physical effort, I did spend a lot of time imagining and feeling my way into the job I wanted.

Then I let the General Manager of the Universe figure out all the details.

Much easier this way than the old way of efforting.
I'm working for a great company (I had no idea they were that wonderful until I started working for them)...working with a great manager...working on a great project...with wonderful people.

I've been going through Orientation for the last couple days. Yesterday, my new boss called a department meeting and asked everyone to say their name, explain what they do, how long they've worked there, what they like and a challenge they have. Every single person LOVED their job. There were no negatives, other than two people saying they never wanted to leave and thought maybe that was a negative.

LOVE IT! ! !

I'm learning so much and it's so fun.

Seems to me that in the past my brain would have been fried by the end of the day and I would have been exhausted with all that new information overloading my circuits. But Alexis noticed how energized I was when I got home at 6:00 pm on Friday. That's what it's like where there's no resistance. Just breathing...and enjoying.
Life is good...and it gets better and better.

I wish I could tell you all the details. For a while, I was saying, "it's unbelievable" because so many good things were coming to me so quickly. But now I'm realizing that this is the way Life is supposed to be. So I believe...and accept...and expect.
And all those good things didn't happen accidentally or by luck. I spend time consciously, deliberately focusing my thoughts and feelings on what I want, what I want, what I want. It's not hard, but it does take attention.

I'm loving it.

It's so much fun.

I'm in that place Abraham talks about:  enjoy where you are and be eager for what's coming!

May the rush of the vortex surround you,


Catherine

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Japan Earthquake/Tsunami: Day 13

I SEE THAT SANDRA BULLOCK AND GWEN STEFANI HAVE EACH DONATED $1M TO THE JAPAN EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI RELIEF. I've always loved these women. They're beautiful on the inside and outside. THANK YOU for your generosity! ! !


Gwen has always loved Japan and introduced the Harajuku Girls (four young Japanese and Japanese-American backup dancers) on stage and in vids during her solo pop/dance phase. Sephora carries her Harajuku Lovers Fragrance. And sales of a special-edition T-shirt on the No Doubt website (see NoDoubt.com) will also benefit relief efforts.

Harajuku (hara.joo.koo) n. 1. A style and attitude of Japanese girls from Harajuku, Tokyo.  n. 2. Anything goes; outrageous, layered, and eye-catching.


HAD A LOVELY DINNER WITH ALEXIS AND THE CRAIGSTER (my New York friend who's in the music industry and working in LA for a while setting up a concert and launching a record label) at Cafe Cruz Rosticceria & Bar.

We started off with Cucumber Martinis...mmm!

Craig had a wonderfully crusted fish. Alexis and I shared the Cafe Cruz Trio Platter:  Smoked Pork Chop perched atop house applesauce, along with a Maryland Crab Cake topped with lemon beurre blanc (sauce), accompanied with a 1/4 Garlic Chicken with aioli. We get two sides; Alexis ordered fresh-cut fries and I had a pile of garlic-flavored smashed potatoes.


We ended the meal on a sweet note, sharing a Creme Brulee.

Heaven!

If you'd like to have an amazing meal, stop by Cafe Cruz, 2621 41st Avenue, Soquel, CA 95073, 831-476-3801.

May yummy food surround you,


Catherine