Bunny’s TMI

More than you ever wanted to know about what goes on in my life and my brain.

Old To Do’s

Found an old To Do List, some of it is done and some of it is lifestyle/budget type stuff.

To do/buy after graduation

Buy house w/Mom – done

Pay off loan/debt – done (repeatedly, and in progress again)

Save up 6 month’s pay – CDs?

Put $3000 into IRA (roth – taxes less now than later) – in progress

Invest at least 10% of pay (if more than $3000 then invest rest in mutual funds) – in progress

Buy new glasses & sunglasses – done

Join gym (gymnastics, yoga, swimming) – done

Dance classes – done

Get conure

Get laptop computer – done

Subscribe to birdtalk, maxim, reader’s digest (?), Newtype (and other fav Japanese mags)

Get massage regularly (bi-weekly/monthly)

Volunteer (POC, SPCA, big sister/mentor)

Buy nice clothes – in progress

Buy sewing machine & serger to make clothes

Martial arts w/Mitch

Take fun classes (UCD craft center, experimental college, etc.)

Buy multi-disc CD/DVD player

Buy cds, books, dvds – in progress

Movies, meals, activities w/friends – in progress

Christmas savings for gifts, tree, decorations, supplies – in progress

Furniture, house décor (pier 1 imports, ikea) – in progress

Donate $ to rainforest/parrot/animal (10%)

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My Pirate

Is back after two weeks. I will be too busy hugging him to post for a while probably. :D

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Kawaii Not: Cute Gone Bad

Kawaii Not is one of the web comics that I read regularly, going with the cute but naughty theme, the artist’s work fits right in. One I really like:

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Movies & Meals

My brother came to visit (though we didn’t get to go see out dad this weekend like originally planned). We’ve mostly been hanging out and watching movies. We did have dinner at Sudwerks (yum!) with MM on Saturday, and today we went to see Shrek 3 with my climbing buddy. We were going to go climbing afterwards, but the climbing wall was closed for some event.

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Why I want to telecommute

Or work half time for twice the pay (same net take home). From all the readily available work on this topic, I don’t think I’m alone in wanting to break free from being a wage slave. I want to be paid for my work, not for the time my butt is stuck in an office.

His 21st-century counterparts are an army of product researchers, academics and personal improvement gurus, who all agree we are frittering valuable minutes, hours and even entire days, though they can’t agree on how many.

American workers, on average, spend 45 hours a week at work, but describe 16 of those hours as “unproductive,” according to a study by Microsoft. America Online and Salary.com, in turn, determined that workers actually work a total of three days a week, wasting the other two. And Steve Pavlina, whose Web site (stevepavlina.com) describes him as a “personal development expert” and who keeps incremental logs of how he spends each working day, urging others to do the same, finds that we actually work only about 1.5 hours a day.

From: Time Wasted? Perhaps It’s Well Spent
NY Times, 5/31/07, By LISA BELKIN

More:

We are wasting time because we are working harder.

“The longer you work, the less efficient you are,” said Bob Kustka, the founder of Fusion Factor, a productivity and time-management consulting firm in Norwell, Mass. He says workers are like athletes in that they are most efficient in concentrated bursts.

And:

“The old thinking says ‘the longer it takes, the harder you’re working,” says Lynne Lancaster, a founder of BridgeWorks, a business consulting firm. “The new thinking is ‘if I know the job inside and out and I’m done faster than everyone else then why can’t I go home early?’ ”

And:

At the headquarters of Best Buy in Minneapolis, for instance, the hot policy of the moment is called ROWE, short for Results Only Work Environment.

There workers can come in at four or leave at noon, or head for the movies in the middle of the day, or not even show up at all. It’s the work that matters, not the method. And, not incidentally, both output and job satisfaction have jumped wherever ROWE is tried.

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Love and Respect

From one of the columns I read regularly:

“Small moments of courtesy, gentleness and all that good stuff that rounds out your life together is the carefulness I have in mind. “Company manners” is one way to describe my idea of carefulness in love. To be used every single day, so it becomes normalcy. When love and respect are everyday parts of the relationship, careful relating is a seamless result.”

From:
Handle With Care
on Single File by Susan Deitz

That really captures my thoughts about why my friends and family are the ones I should treat with the most courtesy, be the most polite to. It’s a way of showing my respect and appreciation for them. But also, its the kind of person I want to be. I want to be able to show respect to any and all that I meet, and if I don’t practice it daily, with those who surround me, then it won’t come naturally.

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