Thinking Travel

ok, here goes week 1

It’s a few hours into the first week of my one-new-thing-a-week project. I’m already struggling with perfectionism.

In December I came up with lots and lots of ideas for new things I could do each week. I was super excited. But then, as January 1 drew nearer, I no longer liked any of my ideas. I started thinking…

Gah! What should my first thing be? No, I can’t do that, what a dumb idea. I have to think of something better. Something more interesting. Something more…perfect.

When I realized I was searching for the perfect thing, rather than a thing, I forced myself to simply choose.

So…what thing did I choose for this week?

Morning pages. (If you’re not familiar with this term it refers to the practice of putting a pen to paper and writing down whatever is on your mind until you’ve filled 3 pages.)

The easy: I’m a journaling type of gal, so I look forward to this week’s thing.

The hard: I already get up extra early to work on CulturallyTeaching and other projects before leaving for work. This week I’ll have to get up even earlier. Ugh.

My commitment: To write 3 full pages every morning this week, no matter how early I have to get up.

How it’s going: I did my 3 pages this morning. I think I chose a very easy first thing.

I’ll tweet about my progress throughout the week. I welcome accountability, supportive comments, and hearing about your own projects for 2010!

How About CulturallyTeaching.com?

I’ve been focusing my energy on CulturallyTeaching.com, the blog I co-run about education and culture around the world. Check it out! Thanks.

Good Week(end)

Even though Aaron and I were zipping through the Costa Rican rainforest this time last year, this year is going pretty well.

  • We’re finishing a 3-day weekend.
  • Aaron made me breakfast on Sunday morning.
  • We’ve been getting our money’s worth with Netflix.
  • Snow is in the forecast for tomorrow.
  • Obama!!!

How thankful I am that tonight is Bush’s last night as President! Woo hoo! Like a lot of people, this is the first time I’m actually excited about and going to watch the presidential inauguration. And I’m hopeful, excited, and optimistic. And actually proud to be U.S. American. Who would have thought?

photo by Michael Rhodes

Obligatory Retrospection Post: 2008 Was a Darn Good Year

photo by Dee Q8

Let’s see, in 2008 I…

  • traveled to Costa Rica, Turkey, Venezuela, Jamaica, and Spain.
  • traveled with Aaron twice (Costa Rica & Spain) and Shannon once (Turkey).
  • developed and delivered several new intercultural workshops and a plenary to fantastic audiences.
  • visited all of my families this year over the Christmas holiday.
  • reconnected with old friends on Facebook.
  • stopped lurking so much online, actually reached out to some people, started Twittering.
  • went to SIIC and IDI training.
  • celebrated our 8th wedding anniversary with Aaron.
  • worked on our house.
  • coached Otto into being a lap cat.
  • saw the Cure and REM in concert.
  • started CulturallyTeaching.com, a blog project exploring culture and education around the world.

I could go on. But you get the idea. Sure, there were some really sucky things that happened in 2008. But mostly, it was a really great year.

Now, onward to 2009. Even better things are ahead.

10:15 on a Saturday Night

photo by ashengrove

Aaron and I are playing Scrabble, which means I have time to blog. Aaron’s going to win because I suck at Scrabble. I’m too impatient to come up with high scoring words. Once in a while I get lucky with “quip” or “zoo” in a triple word score corner, but mostly it’s “cutie” and “mead” and “gig” (three words from the present game). Update: I just scored 53 points with “pox”, so maybe I’m not as bad as I thought? (Ehhh, no. I think the Scrabble gods just got tired watching me suffer.)

We’ve been busy during our days off. We’ve nearly cleaned the entire house, muffins and pumpkin bread are in the freezer in individual-sized portions, the turkey has been cut up and stuffed in freezer bags, and I have turkey stock simmering on the stove for tomorrow’s turkey veggie soup. Aaron blew all of the leaves off the roof, planted more bulbs, and started on our new mailbox. The days have flown by, we’ve been so busy.

I started uploading our Spain photos to Flickr, if you’d like to take a look.

It’s Sunday and I’m Happy

photo by cesarastudillo

Usually I’m not this happy that it’s Sunday. Usually I’m wondering where the weekend went and looking forward to the next weekend. It’s not that I don’t enjoy my job. It’s that I’ve got so many projects going on that I can’t focus on each of them as much as I’d like. And that makes me unhappy when Sunday afternoon rolls around.

But today I’m happy. Because I only have to go to work Monday and Tuesday and then I have five whole days off to focus on my projects. Yeah!

Aaron and I have been busy getting ready for Thanksgiving week. We bought all of our groceries for Thursday’s dinner and we started cleaning the house so we can de-flea it and Otto. Aaron used his new leaf blower (yes, we broke down and bought one) and blew the leaf carpet up to the road and is now planting bulbs. I’m so glad Aaron enjoys, or is at least willing, to do yard work.

I’ve been switching out my clothes closet and getting rid of as much as I possibly can. I still have clothes from the year I graduated from college (1995)! What’s up with that? And, of course, I’ve been working on culturallyteaching.com

But I’ve got even bigger plans for my five days off. To keep me accountable, here’s my very manageable  to-do list:

  1. Blog. Write posts and get the word out.
  2. Bake. Muffins, breakfast bread, pie, and cupcakes.
  3. Bathroom. Scrub the bathtub, ’cause oh my does it need it.

There are several other things I need to do around the house, and several other fun projects I’d like to work on (like uploading my Spain photos to Flickr and finishing my Spain blog posts), but the three items above are my top priority.

We’ll see how I do…

Getting Organized

Photo by hummyhummy

I’ve been back from my Costa Rica/Spain/South Carolina travel-o-rama for two weeks now and am finally getting organized at work, at home, and in the blogosphere.

As I type, my Spain photos are being uploaded to my computer so I can organize and upload them to Flickr. I’m also writing several blog posts about our experiences in Spain. Stay tuned.


Photo by Alessandro Pucci

I’m also working working working on my new blog adventure CulturallyTeaching! I’m so excited to finally launch the site. I’ve harbored the blog concept for several years and am finally getting my act together to get it going. Monday is launch day!

Going to School in Costa Rica

In October I went to San Jose, Costa Rica to give two intercultural workshops at the Tri-Association conference for international schools (the session participants were awesome, BTW).

Tuesday, October 14

Tuesday, October 14

While I was there, I visited a public elementary school in rural Cartago with a colleague from our Costa Rica office. I love visiting schools in other countries and was honored to have the opportunity to spend the morning with a class of kindergarten kids and their teacher.

Here are some photos from my visit:

The elementary school in Cartago

The front of the school

Me with teachers in the library

Me with teachers in the library

After talking and reading about Halloween - in English and Spanish - we passed out "pumpkins" for the kids to decorate

Handing out pumpkins to color after talking and reading a book about Halloween

For more school photos visit my Flickr!

Madrid Memories

Photo by africankelly

Photo by africankelly

Well, we’re back. We’re home. We’re sitting on the couch watching TV (election results!) while surfing on our laptops. It hasn’t even been a week and we’re back to doing the same old thing.

This is what we were doing last Tuesday in Madrid:

  • drinking cafe con leche at a local bar
  • buying an umbrella at El Corte Ingles to protect us from the all-day downpour
  • eating pastries filled with chocolate in a bakery at the Puerta del Sol
  • touring the fancy rooms and the way-cool armory at the Palace
  • eating the menu del dia at a cozy restaurant near the Plaza Mayor
  • riding a city bus to the outskirts of Madrid just to look around
  • watching a Scottish bagpipe group march through Puerta del Sol (they were raising money)
  • eating late-night tapas while wishing we could stay in Madrid

There’s just no comparison. Last Tuesday was way more fun than today.

We had an awsome time in Spain and my trip to Costa Rica was also fabulous. I’ve got a lot to write about so I’m going to try to write several short posts over the next few weeks. Stay tuned…

Journaling Madrid and Granada

photo by Adactio

photo by Adactio

By the time you read this I’ll be in Madrid. Hopefully enjoying a nice cafe con leche and a tortilla.

I’m trying out a new journaling technique on this trip. Two, actually.

The first one is a postcard journal. I’m going to buy postcards and make my journaling notes on them. When I get back home I’ll bind them together.

The second one is a photo journal of all of the food I eat and the cafe con leche I drink. I’m going to take a photo of everything I eat on this trip.

I’ll show you the finished products when I’m get home. Until then, I’m going to enjoy Madrid and Granada!

Hi, I'm Cate.

My goal in 2010 is to do one new thing each week, no matter how small. I'm documenting my progress on this blog and Twitter.

If you'd like to follow along - or even start your own do-one-new-thing-a-week project - that would be awesome. Your supportive comments, insights, and accountability are most welcome.

I'm utterly fascinated by the projects people commit to so if you're working on a personal project in 2010, I'd love to hear about it -- you can email me at cate [@] thinkingtravel [.] com or leave a comment.

week 1 :: morning pages
week 2 :: lynda.com
week 3 :: in bed by 11pm
week 4 :: cook new veg meal
week 5 :: connect

my other project CulturallyTeaching.com



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