A few ideas to make tomorrow better.

I’d like to start doing three things each night before bed to improve the following day. 

First – Prep the coffee machine. Until recently, we used a french press for our morning brew and it was simple. Add water, steep the grounds, pour cups of motivation, and rinse. Now we have a machine that could be programmed to have me a cup at 7:30 am each day if I would set it up. I have yet to do that so in the meantime, I’ve started adding water, a new filter, and grounds for the next morning. So when I’m ready to go when I push the brew button. Easy peasy but a life changer. 

Second – Read more before bed. I had a great routine of reading before bed for nearly a year. It was a great way to end the day and begin resting. I would usually read a cookbook, a self-help-style book, or a history/adventure book. Something that was engaging yet easy to read. Anything complex would get my overactive mind moving back toward my phone and the mindless searching and scrolling. Reading at night helps me rest up better than staring at my phone as a fall asleep. 

Currently, I have a list of four books I’m planning to read this month:

  • The Nordic guide to living 10 years longer – Dr Bertil Marklund 
  • A Portrait of British Cheese: A Celebration of Artistry, Regionality, and Recipes –
    Angus D Birditt
  • Winning Without losing – Martin Bjergegaard
  • Open Design Now: Why Design Cannot Remain Exclusive – Bas Van Abel 

I suppose here is my commitment to myself and to you. I’ll read 30 min a night before bed for all of March. I’ll follow up on April 1st. 

Third and lastly, plan my day ahead. I hate task lists with all my being. They annoy my free-spirited nature but make or break the following day’s productivity. I need to use my task list on my phone better as a companion to my calendar to better plan my life out. 

My partner is a master of this but me, a serial procrastinator, I do just that… Procrastinate my planning and have less productive days than I would like to. The value here is knowing what needs to be done and being able to do it one task at a time. Knowing myself I’ll do the easy tasks first then move to the more difficult ones as late in the day as possible. I ought to fix that. 

So here goes nothing, three simple tasks that are going to help me have a better day tomorrow. Here’s to a month of coffee prep, planning, and reading before bed to make my next day better. 

Till next time. 

Casey

I’m taking a break from Social Media.

I feel like I see a post like this from time to time. Is it a clickbait title? Possibly for many but for me, it’s just what I want you to know. I’m stepping offline from all the social networking to get a breather and a reset.

I am not sure how long this is going to be for. I could make it thirty days and jump back on armed with a better-balanced use plan for the apps on my phone and maybe have more self-control. I could decide to take a year or so. At this point I’m uncertain.

I am certain that I spend too much time on my phone looking at videos and images that mean nearly nothing to me. Occasionally, I’ll see a post from a family member or friend that matters but mostly I’m just… scrolling. I’m looking for something and I’m not sure what scrolling through the depths of apps with the same theme and repeat content is going to do for me. So I’m taking a break from social media for the foreseeable future.

I jumped online during the myspace days and haven’t really looked back. I’ve lost hours of my life looking at a small screen, trying to keep up with the trends. It’s exhausting. . . I have no idea how or why I have tried to manage that much input of things that do not really matter to me.

So, for now, I’m going to spend less time looking at my phone and more time pursuing things that I actually enjoy. I’m going to read more, write more often, spend time with my family and prepare for the changes that are coming in the next few months. I just want to be able to spend less time bowed over my phone scrolling and more time enjoying life. Who knows maybe I’ll try out this method of turning my phone back into a tool instead of a distraction.

Thanks for reading, I’ll see you next post.

Casey

Time.

It’s strange that it has been over two months since I last wrote here. Since then I have moved from an RV back into an apartment, started another semester at University(Just 2 more to go.), traveled a few times for work, and thought about writing here at least once a day. It’s strange how time can just get away from you like that.

Dutch designer Maarten Baas’ giant Real Time Schiphol timepiece replaces traditional clock hands with a 12-hour-long video performance.

My real question for myself is what was holding me back from writing? Was it fear that no one would be interested in what I had to say? Could it be I do not have the best work-School-life balance? Or is it that I just thought about what I could write then bowed back towards my phone and continued mindlessly tapping away at the touchscreen?

I’d like to say it was a combination of all of the above. A mix of everything that was calling out for my time and energy. Ultimately I do not have a reason other than I chose something else over a few minutes of tapping away at something to write and share here. Things feel heavy at the end of the day and the weight of it all leads me to looking mindlessly at my phone at the end of the day and trying to rest up.

This week I decided to take Friday off to spend a bit of time cleaning my house, playing with my dogs, and heading to spend time with my family and take some family pictures. I love driving home and seeing reminders of my time driving between the big city and my small hometown.

I count the landmarks down as we drive back home today just the same as I used to from the backseat of my parent’s car.

Mountain X, that looks like a face.

The old windmills that spin day and night.

A group of houses that are abandoned but I want to explore.

Reservoir Y where there are petroglyphs.

A dairy farm where I stepped in mud as a child with my new school shoes.

The bright lights leading us down main street.

And finally, the last bend at the high school and just a mile till we were home.

These are markers of time and distance I have used for nearly 30 years and I expect I’ll use them for another 30 years to come as I travel the road that leads me home.

A Few Thoughts On Podcasting.

Sorry, it’s been a minute folks, life has been happening. So I thought I’d drop in with a quick note about one of my favorite hobbies, podcasting. 

I run a podcast with two friends called “Pause, Rewind, Play” and we’ve been doing this off and on since 2019. It’s been one of the longest projects I’ve worked on and one of the most challenging I’ve worked on for many reasons. However, doing a podcast with my friends about movies we enjoy is one of the MOST ENJOYABLE things I have done as an adult. 

Our podcast is literally three friends talking about movies, what we enjoyed, the practical effects, excellent & awful CGI, actors, directors, soundtracks, and bigger meanings or stories behind film. Are we professionals? Nope. Do we have nearly 100 episodes under our belt as of today? Yes. 

How did this start you ask? Randomly. 

Has it been something I’ve enjoyed? Extensively. 

Is this post a shameless plug for you to go listen to my podcast? Yes. 

Listen anywhere podcasts can be found or head here

Casey

Reading.

I’d never declare myself to be a strong reader. I tend to slowly read things and often find myself rereading sentences and paragraphs to confirm I’ve correctly understood the material or story. Yet, despite my limits, I really enjoy reading as a form of attaining new information.

I try and have a physical book I’m working through nearby with a soft goal of reading a book a month about something I’m interested in or a story I’ve been told I’d enjoy reading from a friend or family member. Getting book ideas from friends and family can be the best thing or the worst thing for me. The people pleaser in me will read the book for the benefit of receiving further recommended titles but the procrastinator in me will very slowly read the book and derail my reading flow.

I never thought I’d be as much of a book person as I am. I try and read for at least 30 min a day. This gets me away from my computer and phone.

I usually switch from a physical copy of the book to an audiobook format and listen to the book while I bike or drive. This lets me follow through with the recommended reading so I can follow up with the recommender and learn something I might not have sought out myself. I thank the inventor of audiobooks all the time as they’ve helped me through some dull reading at 1.5 speed. (Insert laughing track here)

Some of my favorite books to read include cookbooks, Autobiographies, Informational Books, Coffee Table-esue books that highlight a journey, lifestyle, etc and from time to time I enjoy a well-written trilogy. It’s nice to have something I can step outside of my day to day and enjoy for an hour and just be in the moment. Slowly reading the words over and building the story one line at a time as I go. I’ve used reading as a way to decompress after school, work, and sometimes after family events.

As I mentioned last week I’m still studying at university and I do end up reading heaps of information for my classes. Somehow through all that time, I haven’t lost my love for spending a little time with a book for fun just to zone out. It’s a strange thing to spend hours researching, reviewing, and writing for school on subjects I’m neutral about but if given the opportunity to discuss some of the things I’ve learned from my own reading outside school I’m happy to go all in on these topics anytime, anyplace.

I think I’ve rambled plenty for now so I’ll leave you with this, a few good reads from 2022 thus far.

Currently, I’m listening to Yes, Chef: A Memoir by Marcus Samuelsson and currently reading through The Happiest Kids in the World: How Dutch Parents Help Their Kids (and Themselves) by Doing Less by Michele Hutchison and Rina Mae Acosta. I’m also reading Dieter Rams: Ten Principles for Good Design on the side.

Thanks for reading,

Casey.

Education and Work.

I’m saying it.

My years in college have drug on far too long.

Work isn’t the worst but it takes up time in my day that I could be doing more enjoyable things.

I guess you could say that waking up in the morning to look at a screen, talk to people, troubleshoot, consult, run scenarios and coach people on how to ____ is an interesting way to spend my day.

Then after my shift is finished at work I close my work computer and open my personal computer and log onto the school site and begin nearly the same amount of time each night learning about what I do in my day job from a different perspective. It’s interesting to be this far in my career and still be a university student at night. It’s not a sad thing, just a draining one that has caused me to feel older than I am yet younger than I am because my time at university has extended far past the usual years one would traditionally spend as a student.

I enjoy learning but dang, I’ve been spending too many hours in a desk at university.
https://www.pexels.com/@cottonbro/

Am I mad or sad about this? Sometimes.

Am I grateful that I have been able to attend college and further my education for the workforce? Yes.

It’s a real balance of thought for me to have always seen the value in a degree. My father never completed school but has ran a business effectively for nearly 40 years, having learned meaning things on the go and as they come up on a need to learn and know basis. I’ve always been of fan of learning things that way so I understand the application of the information rather than just a theory.

In school I’ve often been told this could happen but is unlikely so we’ve decided you need NEED to know it and its going to not make any sense but, you need to learn it to move forward and enter the workforce. That has never made sense to me spending so much time of “What if..” and not effectively running through real world tasks that I can use right away in my day to day work. I once had a class in 2018 where a professor shared data from a pre internet marketing era expressing his belief that the internet would fail sooner or later and print ads still held their weight as the primary marketing we should be running. It was a wild time.

All the “What if…” of school makes me think of this moment from Hercules.

Yet, I’ve seen many people step into university with one plan for their life and walk out with a completely different passion after taking the lower level intro classes. So for some the value changes as they grow and develop. I too changed my major a few times when I started school and yet business and marketing keeps me anchored as my goal for a degree.

I suppose these are just a few of my unorganized thoughts on education and work, with the focus being on school and how I feel about it. I do see an end finally after nearly a decade as a part time student who had worked full time and beyond during that time. I’ll finally see my degree in the spring of 2023.

Thanks for reading,

Casey

Been Busy: An Update

Since I last wrote, I’ve been staying busier than I’d like with school and work. However, we’ve also had a few grand adventures, listened to/read a few good books, completed another semester of school, and taken a road-trip to Washinton state and back.

I figured I’d write a few shorter posts and schedule them over the next month with a few highlights from each thing I mentioned above. Not the most exciting content to read, but I want to write about them nevertheless. I suppose you might say I’m writing more for myself as a way to remember my life than for an audience, but if there is enjoyment and value that can be found here for others, welcome!

Martijn Doolaard in Zion National Park, Utah, USA.

Currently, I’ve been staying entertained reading a few books by Martijn Doolaard, a Dutch adventurer who has spent a few years traveling long distances by bike. His first book, “One Year on a Bike: From Amsterdam to Singapore” and his second book “Two Years On A Bike: From Vancouver to Patagonia”. I read his books in reverse, starting with his journey through the Americas and his experiences bikepacking through my home country and a few of the latin American countries I’ve visited.

Since learning about this adventurer, I’ve learned he has created a series around his life in the Italian Alps repairing a few old stone cabins. If you’re interested in home restoration, you can watch his beautiful work here: https://www.youtube.com/c/MartijnDoolaard

Thanks for reading,

Casey

Failing To Follow Through: Where I Am.

I like many others start out a new year with ambitions to do more of ____, less of ____, and just enough of ____. While I set off each year with good intentions somehow I only see about half of my goals through. This becomes increasingly frustrating year after year and seems to set my vision lower each year as I fear I cannot reach a high bar and see it through to completion.

If I’m being honest I feel like I’ve started out this year much the same as mentioned above. My mind dreams up big opportunities and rarely do I write these down or move them past the idea stage. It causes me to spin in place, become distracted out of necessity, and finally a little less confident than I was before. This is a strange place that I never thought I would be in as an adult and a younger me might have a few thoughts on how unproductive and unsuccessful thirty-one-year-old Casey is.

There isn’t a lot of fear in sharing these truths because I know I’m not alone in feeling this way. I’m not alone in feeling things have happened differently than I expected them to.

All I know is where I am today and where I hope to go moving forward. I’ll share more about my desired destinations in my next post. Until then enjoy this graphic I found on LinkedIn.

-Casey

I Can’t Believe It’s Twenty-Twenty Two.

It feels like yesterday I was wearing glow in the dark glasses that welcomed the year 2000 running around my grandparent’s yard lighting fireworks then trying to fall asleep before we made it home so that my dad would have to carry me into bed. Now I’m 31 years old living out of a thirty three foot travel trailer with my partner and two dogs and this is not how I expected to be living, but this has been one of the best experiences I never knew I needed. I’m not a extraordinary writer but have always wanted to share experiences, stories, and random thoughts as a writer so as always, here goes nothing.

Taken at Farwell Bend State Park on September 11th, 2021. This was our first BIG outing and we drove from Utah County, UT to Grays Harbor County, WA.

Last July we sold our house, boxed up the things we wanted for our next home then ventured out in a 33ft travel trailer built in 2007 to find new things out about our home state and the Western US. We spent 3 weeks in Washington State and learned we were underprepared foreverything but had the time of our life exploring small coastal towns and meeting new people. We spent more time than hoped parked in driveways but were able to connect with family through the few feet that separated their homes and our trailer.

I could keep rambling about the past year and more specifically the past six months but I figure you are more interested in the here and now(You know, whats happening right now as I write this out. It’s -2 degrees and the floor of our trailer feels akin to an ice rink.) This year is going to be something special and I can feel it in my boots and look forward to sharing more with you as I experience it. You can expect to hear about my partner, our dogs, the places we visit, the food we eat, and the ups and downs of traveling through the well to little known parts of the US and wherever else we roam. Thanks in advance for being here and wanting to read about these experiences.

Casey