Saturday, October 29, 2011

San Diego

 Del Mar

 Cliff walk

 Yep, that's a train on the cliff walk.





Went to San Diego to check out UCSD.  Quite an experience! 

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Boston

I love Boston so much!  It's such a wonderful city.  Ronny and I went up for a friend's wedding and had a wonderful time!  We stayed in a vacation rental in South Boston.  It was a great Victorian house close to everything and reasonably priced.  We haven't had much to take pictures of lately, so here some pictures from the weekend.
Rehearsal dinner at The Palms

 Ronny and Chris at Stats in Southie

 Wedding at Boston Public Library


 Friends since middle school.

 I throw my hands up in the air sometimes!



Chris and Sami all the way from Switzerland.

Mrs. Dr. Remington

That's right folks!  Ronny graduated!!!  He's Dr. Remington and therefore I am Mrs. Dr. Remington.  I worked just as hard, so you can certainly refer to me by a name that seemingly does not have anything to do with me.  I'm sure some of you (okay one of you) was wondering if the transition I spoke of  involved babies...no just a diploma and new title.  Ronny is working at UF as a postdoctoral researcher.  It sounds fancy, but it's the same thing he was doing except now he's getting paid a real salary for his work.  Meanwhile, I got a job at UF through a temp agency (got to love this economy and being over qualified--thank you masters degree).  I work for three professors in the Family, Youth, and Community Sciences department (Tebow's major).  It's not rocket science or the job of my dreams, but it is a paycheck and now I can start paying back my student loans! Oh, it's so glamorous!

So what's next?  That's the real transition.  We want to get out of Gainesville.  Ronny has decided that he wants to transition into finance.  Yes, he's a physicist, but what he really does is computer software development.  In the finance field there is something called a quant.  They do the math behind the stock market (no they didn't necessarily cause the crash).  That's what he's looking at.  So he's applied at Twitter and D.E. Shaw.  We'll see what happens.  It looks like my opportunities are in the northeast and Washington D.C. area.  I'm just looking forward to the next step.

Meanwhile, we are seriously thinking about starting a family.  The last two years have been a challenge for me.  I've sacrificed a lot to further Ronny's career and I'm glad I did it.  But now I'm want to start my life.  I feel like we've had to put things on hold and I'm not doing that anymore.  There is not perfect time and if you wait for it you will let life pass you by.  I have babies on the brain and I'm fine with that.  I wanted to start trying to have kids when I was 28, and two weeks ago I reached that landmark age.  I'm not exactly where I thought I'd be professionally, but that's life right now.  It's time to start trying...well maybe we'll start in a couple of months.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Still Here

We're still here.  Many many things have gone on and there's been a major transition, but I don't have pictures to go with it.  When I get done working the last thing I want to do is be on the computer.  Just wanted to let my meager blog audience know I'm still here.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

My Feelings on Healthcare

This is a sensitive issue for me.  One of my immediate family members was diagnosed with cancer ten days after his twentieth birthday.  He had surgery and radiation therapy.  He had (and still has) health insurance.  It did not cover all the expenses.  Living cancer free does not mean you are free of the expense incurred from getting sick.  For one year you must get scanned at least every three months to make sure the cancer has not come back.  You should get these scans at least once a year after that.  Those don't come cheap.  The day after his daughter was born, he found out that the radiation therapy damaged his hip resulting in osteo-necrosis, or death of the bone.  His hip was literally crumbling away.  After six months of mind-numbing, debilitating pain he was forced to have his hip replaced at the age of twenty-four.  With insurance his medical bills are huge.

I do not claim to understand the complexity of the healthcare issue.  I passionately feel that it is not okay for someone who develops cancer to fight for their life and then fight to get out of debt.  I just don't understand.  My loved one took care of himself and now works hard to take care of his family.  I put a random Facebook message about healthcare because I don't know how to help him and I was frustrated by the debate.  I don't yet know what the right change is, but something has to change.  When you beat cancer your life should start again; how can you live when debt is strangling you?      

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Running the Gamut

I woke up this morning resolved to find out what was the status of my job prospects.  Oh, I am getting ahead of myself.  I quit my job at the restaurant.  Honestly, I was miserable.  My dear friend Annie gave me a stern talking to and suggested that I find a new way to define happiness.  I am a supportive, loving wife and that is AWESOME!  I did some real soul searching and realized that I cannot continue to be unhappy--so I quit.  Of course I gave two weeks notice!
I haven't stopped applying for jobs.  I don't talk about it, I just do it.  I applied for a job at UF and finally got an interview.  It was the best interview of my life.  I answered all the questions well, I made myself available and open to anything.  I left knowing I got the job.  Today I found out I didn't.  I called to see if they had made a decision.  I was told (without asking mind you) that I was their top candidate and "I just feel so bad saying that because we chose someone else".  I was devastated.  This isn't my dream job; it's just a job I need and would have rocked.  The world doesn't make sense to me.  Now, I'm mad.  How can I learn from this?  What is there to improve upon?  Should I try not to be the top choice?
So, I applied for an historic preservation job today.  I got a call this afternoon.  I had a phone interview, and while I'm not getting my hopes up at all, it's a step in a positive direction.
I'm exhausted.  I've cried, yelled, and now I feel optimistic.  Here's hoping....

Friday, April 15, 2011

Now Casting...

Why is it the T.V. shows that are really popular center around twenty-somethings figuring out life with the support of their super close friends who all congregate at the local coffee shop/bar and live across the hall?  Do I need to live in a high rise and drink a lot to find my group?  I've lived in Ormond Beach, Tallahassee, Atlanta, Gainesville, and SwitzerFrance--how am I supposed to accumulate a group of close-knit twenty-somethings when I am not in one place long enough to master the language?
So I'm now casting my own twenty-something sitcom, we'll call it "life" (small "L").  At any point you may be replaced by one of my awesome friends that live in Atlanta, Miami, or Daytona.  Of course, we would have to end up living in the same high rise for that to happen--chances are slim.
To the great friends I have and miss so much, thank you!