I don’t think there are many of you out there who actually
read this blog, so maybe it’s silly to apologize for such a long silence. I’ve been a little busy with work and
Thanksgiving, and I’ve been feeling pretty blah about things as I’ve continued
to live with a pain problem that seems to have no real solution.
But in the interest of attempting to be positive in these shortening days, with the approach of winter and the continuation of chronic pain issues, let me just fill you in on some of the big accomplishments of the last few weeks that are worthy of celebration.
But in the interest of attempting to be positive in these shortening days, with the approach of winter and the continuation of chronic pain issues, let me just fill you in on some of the big accomplishments of the last few weeks that are worthy of celebration.
I changed my timing belt.
That’s right.
On my car. A friend from
work helped me do it. It took us 8
½ hours, and then another hour or so the next day to fix a slight oil leak
resulting from mis-aligning a gasket on the valve cover.
I was in a ton of pain through the whole process, but I learned a lot and managed to save a few hundred dollars by doing the labor myself. This was a big confidence builder.
I was in a ton of pain through the whole process, but I learned a lot and managed to save a few hundred dollars by doing the labor myself. This was a big confidence builder.
I’m perfecting a bread baking routine.
My sister gave me a really simple, no-knead bread
recipe. It’s so easy that I’ve
baked a loaf of bread every few days since I got over the initial inertia. And the bread tastes great, toasts
well, and keeps long enough that even as a single lady I can eat it all before
it gets moldy. It’s also
simple and easy enough that I don’t mind sharing it! I’ll share the recipe here eventually.
Baking your own bread is another one of those things in life
that builds confidence and makes you feel connected to reality in some
way. People have been baking bread
in their homes for thousands of years, and it feels good to join the
ranks. It feels even better for it
to be a simple, relatively painless process for someone like me who struggles
with low-energy and high-pain.
I bought a really nice food processor.
That’s right. I
splurged. The old food processor
that my sister gave me just wasn’t cutting it. It couldn’t handle certain heavy jobs like pureeing
dates. If I’m to continue to avoid
refined sugar, dates are going to be a big part of my dessert life. So I bought a beast of a machine – from
the Cuisinart Elite collection.
This thing can do anything.
I contributed to Thanksgiving dessert over-indulgence.
Using my new food processor, I added to the glut of pies and
desserts at Thanksgiving this year.
I made a Vegan and Refined-Sugar-Free Chocolate Cream Pie, some No-Bake PumpkinCookie Balls (with butternut puree instead of pumpkin), and some Almond-DateTruffles. All turned out even more
delicious than I’d originally fantasized.
It’s a big deal for me to contribute to Thanksgiving
feasts. I normally leave all the
work up to my much more capable brother and mother. This year I knew I’d need to bring my own sugar free
desserts if I was going to get anything sweet. And it turned out to be another little victory in my battle
against pain and lethargy. Yeah,
it hurt to do all the work, but some things are worthwhile.
I’m getting kefir grains!!!
I’m so excited about this. I caught my new chiropractor (more on him later, maybe) showing
off some kefir grains to the receptionist, and he ended up offering to give me
some of the grains when I go to see him next. I’m so excited to try to make my own kefir. Once I figure it out, I’ll fill you in
on how it goes.
1 comment:
Wow. So many reasons for celebration. Thank you for noting them.
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